Originally Posted By: TFF
According to the first definition that pops up under google (wiki),

"The kilowatt hour, or kilowatt-hour, (symbol kW·h, kW h or kWh) is a unit of energy equal to 1000 watt hours or 3.6 megajoules."

Do you agree with this?


YES I AGREE STRONGLY WITH THAT

Why did it say watt hours and then say that it is equal to joules?

notice it did not say joule-hours !!!

which Im sure your algebra would have a fit with that.
but what would you expect from a worthless meaningless
course of study.

Originally Posted By: TFF
No amount of watt-seconds can ever equal any amount of watts.

Nor can any amount of watts ever equal any amount of kwh.


Originally Posted By: TFF
watt hours or 3.6 megajoules


3,600,000 watts = 3,600,000 joule = 1,000 watt hours

Quote:
Nor can any amount of watts ever equal any amount of kwh.


Wrong !!
3.6 MegaWatts does equal 1kwh.


also to seal the deal
from the same page
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kilowatt_hour
ta daaa

Quote:
Inversely, one watt is equal to 1 J/s.


Why didnt it say 1 watt/second is equal to 1 J/s

why would 1 watt equal 1 joule per second?

because time is included in the definition of a watt !!!!

you dont have much of a sense of time or the logic involved when dealing with units that have time built into them.

and just in case your still wondering here is the definition of joule

Originally Posted By: Wiki Joule
It is equal to the energy expended (or work done) in applying a force of one newton through a distance of one metre (1 newton metre or N·m),


notice a unit of joule does NOT include TIME
but
units of watts do !!!!

go put that in your wolfram , LOL









3/4 inch of dust build up on the moon in 4.527 billion years,LOL and QM is fantasy science.