yes
Not if the furnace exceeds 5000 watts.
A 1000 watt generator cannot run a 1500 watt ceramic heater without having problems.
You can find a 5000 watt generator by looking online through www.ebay.com or through www.craigslist.com. When you purchase online you can have it shipped to you and sometimes score free shipping.
yes
5000 (watts) /120 (volts) = 41.6 amps , but to be safe you should allow 1000 watts margin for peaks, so 4000/120 is 33.3amps, although peaks might sometimes get higher than 5kw
not gega watt ,it is gaga watt , you have to start from 1 watt 1000 watt = 1 k watt 1000 000 = 1 mega watt 1000 000 000 = 1 gaga watt example : your home need 5 k watt = 5000 watt , but this mega watt or gaga watt amount generated from huge turbine s ,to feeding cites needs in electricity demand .
Yes, 1000 watts represents the conversion of 1000 Joules of energy each second, so it does not depend on the type of machine.
Not really. A 2000W generator will give you about 10 amps. Your normal RV air conditioner will draw 12-15.
The causes of over loading in generator comes from the action of applying more load that the generator is rated for. An example using a 5000 watt generator and a connected load of 6000 watts.
A 25 foot cord will not cause enough voltage drop to worry about.
6 cents
To convert Watt seconds to milliwatts seconds, you need to multiply by 1000 since there are 1000 milliwatts in a Watt. For example, if you have 5 Watt seconds, it would be equal to 5000 milliwatts seconds.