The wattage rating of a timer is governed by the manufactures specification. As long as the light bulbs wattage rating is not higher than the timers rating, the timer will be alright to use in the circuit. The circuits load is what governs the wattage of the circuit.
3.1 to 3.7 watts - per Kil-o-watt meter
300 watts is the correct answer
3 pence an hour
45 watts
Hoovers use 1000 - 2000 watts
3.1 to 3.7 watts - per Kil-o-watt meter
300 watts is the correct answer
Use 100 watts
That depends on two things: 1. the capacity of the relay that is inside the timer. 2. the current use (watts) of the lights that you are using.
Electric lights that use from 0.02 watts to 50,000 watts have been manufactured. The CFLs, fluorescent tubes, and incandescent bulbs in your house probably operate in the range of 20-100 watts.
Can I use 50 watts light bulb for weed plant
3 pence an hour
LEDs do not work on all timers. This is also the case with many energy saving bulbs. The timer lets enough voltage thru to partially light the LEDs and energy saving bulbs. LEDs will light fully when the timer is "on", but will continue to light dimly when the timer says "off". Energy saving bulbs will have a dim flicker when "off" thru a timer. I have not found a timer yet that solves this problem. If anyone knows of a solution I'd love to be able to use energy efficient lights with the convenience of a timer.
45 watts
15-25 watts for light use in electronics, 100 watts for heavy use in plumbing.
In general Tube Light consumes 0.2 amps in general by 40 Watts.
Hoovers use 1000 - 2000 watts