It is good to understand, that power is the energy production rate or energy
per time unit. If you set timeunit to one, then power and energy are the
same thing.

This is also called as common sense. . . And perhaps Mattia should also need
a degree on common sense. . .

     —Jouni
On Oct 7, 2011 1:58 AM, "Man on Bridges" <manonbrid...@aim.com> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On 7-10-2011 0:46, Mattia Rizzi wrote:
>> Man on Bridges, kWh/h if you leave the two "h" means kW, POWER.
>>
>> "As a consequence, the total production of thermal energy of this
>> particular reactor was: 9,412 Kwh/h + 1,22 Kwh/h = 10,6 Kwh/h"
>> equals to
>> "As a consequence, the total production of *thermal energy* of this
>> particular reactor was: 9,412 Kw + 1,22 Kw = 10,6 Kw"
>> It's simply wrong.
>
> I know what you are referring to and you are right.
>
> The thing is, it's not a matter of syntax but semantics as Stremmenson
> and others who say "kWh/h" i.s.o. "kWh" seem not to know or understand
> that "kWh" is already a unit of energy which is always expressed in
> power per time period.
>
> Kind regards,
>
> MoB
>

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