1000 milliamps (1000 ma) is equal to 1 amp or 1a. So if you mean ma, than the answer is one. But, a milliamphour, or mah, does not equal any amp or amps. That is because an amps current is instantaneous, but an amphour is an amp delivered for one hour, or 1/10th amp delivered for 10 hours.
If I remember right it is 1000 mah. 500 mah is .5 amps, 2000 mah is 2 amps and so on.
1.5 Amperes, or Amps.
1000 Amps
Max amps would be 1000 divided by 120.
There are, 2000/1000 = ,amps in 2000 milliamps. For the math challenged that is 2 amps.
If I remember right it is 1000 mah. 500 mah is .5 amps, 2000 mah is 2 amps and so on.
1.5 Amperes, or Amps.
1000 Amps
It depends on the voltage. WH = Watt Henry, mAH = milliamp Henry, watts = amps * volts and milliamps= 1000 * amps. Thus the conversion is: mAH = 1000 * WH / V, where V is the voltage. I'm looking at the battery for my Dell Studio and it's rated 85WH and 11.1V. So it's 1000 * 85 / 11.1 = 7658 mAH, so in this case 85WH is better than 6600 maH. If we solve 1000 * 85 / V = 6600, we get V = 12.9. When converting from WH, the bigger the voltage the lower the mAH. So for voltages bigger than 12.9 V, 6600mAH is better than 85WH. Hope this helps.
Yes it does! 1000 mAH = 1Ahr 1Ahr = 1000 mAhr 4.4 Ahr * 1000 = 4400 mAH 4400 mAh / 1000 = 4.4 Ahr mAH milli Amp Hours (1000 thousandth of Amp Hour)
Max amps would be 1000 divided by 120.
200 mah s !!!
1000 mAh ==2.6 Ah = 2600 mAh
It varies from one 9 volt battery model to another. The typical Alkaline 9 volt battery you find in many toys and smoke detectors has 565 mAh (Milliampere Hours) of power. A Zinc Carbon model has 400 mAh. A Lithium has 1200 mAh. There are 1,000 mili amps in 1 amp.
There are, 2000/1000 = ,amps in 2000 milliamps. For the math challenged that is 2 amps.
Could be zero, could be 1000 amps. Amps are not the same thing as volts.
1000