Speedster is right; while we all know what you mean, the W/h unit is wrong in this case and to us pedants it's as bad as if you gave the wrong number.
If you take 14000 Watt-hours and divide by 24 hours, you are left with 580 Watts. Not an hour in sight.
Note Watt-hour is a product i.e. two units multiplied together. That's probably part of the issue because ratios are more common, like km/h or R/month.
Also we're used to expressing "final" quantities like mass or distance in simple units like grams or metres.
If electricity was billed in Joules maybe it would be more intuitive.
50400000 J / 86400 s = 583 J/s (= 583 W)
Or maybe not.
Anyway a 580 J/s average rate is quite high for a small house imo. We do about half that.
If you take 14000 Watt-hours and divide by 24 hours, you are left with 580 Watts. Not an hour in sight.
Note Watt-hour is a product i.e. two units multiplied together. That's probably part of the issue because ratios are more common, like km/h or R/month.
Also we're used to expressing "final" quantities like mass or distance in simple units like grams or metres.
If electricity was billed in Joules maybe it would be more intuitive.
50400000 J / 86400 s = 583 J/s (= 583 W)
Or maybe not.
Anyway a 580 J/s average rate is quite high for a small house imo. We do about half that.
