Watts are a unit of power often associated with electricity, but watts also describe the power output of all kinds of work performed over time.
This includes relatively simple tasks like lifting a bucket, rowing a boat, and riding a bike!
Keep in mind that power output is measured every second. This means that the work needs to be done steadily and continuously to keep energy flowing. For example, if you want to power a video game console for one hour using a bicycle, you would need to ride the bike at a steady pace for an entire hour.
Solar panels come in different sizes with different outputs. A typical residential panel will produce between 400 - 500 watts. Ground mount and commercial panels can go as high as 700 watts with higher outputs being released every year.
The Znshine 410 can produce 410 watts at peak performance.
The watt is a small unit of power. Therefore, multiples of the watt, such as the kilowatt (1,000 watts) or the megawatt (one million watts), are often used to describe power outputs at larger scales. In fact, your electric bill is based on how many kilowatts you consume per hour. This measurement is known as a kilowatt hour (kWh). The average household in Wisconsin consumes about 1,000 kilowatt hours (kWh) of electricity per month.
The industry rule of thumb is that 1 kilowatt (kW) of solar installed will produce 1,300-kilowatt hours (kWh) per year. So if your home uses 12,000 kWh per year, we'd estimate you need around a 9kW solar system to meet 100% of your energy needs. That’s about 22 410w solar panels.
Or you could just plan on riding your bicycle 6,666 hours to generate enough electricity to power your home for one month! FYI, that’s the equivalent of riding 24/7 for over 275 days!
A hummingbird uses 1.225 watts of power per second to fly? That’s 2% the energy needed to power a 60w light bulb!
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La Crosse, WI 54603
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