So - not a dragon?hydro. electric.
this is accidentally a canada v us miscommunication.
Hydro = electric
ac thumping.Wild guess: $200/room. It depends on the size of the hotel, obviously and what climate. Summer in AZ will be different than summer in Seattle.
So this hotel is in Arizona or San Antonio in July?ac thumping.
so regardless of where it is, the a/c is basically keeping the room at a consistent temp by running nearly at all times.
a typical hotel chain (holiday inn, best western etc). they're all generally the same size in a metropolitan city, i would assume.Hotel location?
Number of rooms?
Month?
This is is a stupid pole with too many variables.
Somewhere between $1000 and $1,000,000,000
Restaurant?Hotel location?
Number of rooms?
Month?
This is is a stupid pole with too many variables.
Somewhere between $1000 and $1,000,000,000
watSoulfly3 said:a typical hotel chain (holiday inn, best western etc). they're all generally the same size in a metropolitan city, i would assume.
$500KSoulfly3 said:Fake Hotel downtown NYC, in July
AC almost always on
Pool
200 rooms
breakfast buffet restaurant
I believe it has to do with Canada being the #1 (i believe) producer of hydroelectricity.Just because you use the metric system doesn't mean you can mix water and electricity.
What kind of country they running up there that they call electricity water? You wouldn't say "I need to get some high voltage current out of the kitchen faucet" or "I'm gonna plug in my phone to the charger, it's low on aqua"
Must be an Eastern Canadian (Ontario) thing. In the West I always hear it referred to as the power bill, not hydro.I believe it has to do with Canada being the #1 (i believe) producer of hydroelectricity.
hence, we call it hydro. The company that sells the electricity for example... known as "Hydro One"
no great lakes in saskatchewan?Must be an Eastern Canadian (Ontario) thing. In the West I always hear it referred to as the power bill, not hydro.
It’s interesting looking at the provinces. Saskatchewan still has some coal stations I thought it had already been phased out nationwide. It’s looks like Quebec and east plus Manitoba/BC is almost all hydroelectric, Ontario is hydro/nuclear and the west a mix of all the above including coal.no great lakes in saskatchewan?![]()