rmrichesjr wrote:Bringing to mind how my EE and physics professors of former decades would correct the above...
The correct way to say that is "it draws only a couple of watts", period. Or, to be extra wordy, you could say "it draws only a couple of watt-hours per hour". The Watt is a unit of power. The Watt-hour is a unit of energy. Power is energy divided by time. Energy is power multiplied by time.
We surely go off on tangents easily, don't we. (no trigonometry pun intended)thedqs wrote:Though I believe the recharging mechanism generates AC power.
Though the storage medium is DC, true.
The point in my posting above was the difference between energy and power.
The imaginary component, the 'j' term, is only relevant if you're working with power factor issues. The cosine of theta factor is the difference between Watts and Volt-Amps. In a discussion of Watts vs. Watt-hours, it is irrelevant.