kV measures the voltage, while the kW measures the power. Apart from a general relationship that high power is usually associated with high voltage, nothing more definite can be said.
Your question is rather like asking, 'How many metres are there in a kilometre per hour?'! They measure two different quantities, so you can't convert one to the other!
1000 wats
76675654
6500 kW at 240 v would need 6,500,000/240 amps, in other words 27,000 amps. That is not practicable. This amount of power would need to be supplied at a much higher voltage, e.g. 11 kV or 33 kV, 3-phase.
1000 kw
13,800 volts 1 kv = 1 kilovolt = 1000 volts
487.3044 kW
1000 watts
Considering it is kw for kilowatt and not kv. 1 megawatt = 1000 kilowatt.
Multiply by Amps.
"kV" is referring to voltage, "KW" is referring to power. This is synonomous with asking "how many apples are in the tree?" without giving any more information about the tree, or back to your question, the current.
the average home including 5 computers, washing machine, hair dryer... etc.( dishwasher is not included) uses approximately 25 kW/day
With a dc system the kW are always equal to the kV times the amps. It's only with ac that the kW are usually less than the kVA by a factor called the power factor.
kV is kilovolts, kW is kilowatts, kVA is kilovolt amps and kVAR is kilovolt-amps reactive. A common formula is kVA-squared = kW-squared + kVAR-squared.
6500 kW at 240 v would need 6,500,000/240 amps, in other words 27,000 amps. That is not practicable. This amount of power would need to be supplied at a much higher voltage, e.g. 11 kV or 33 kV, 3-phase.
There are 0.001 KV in one V.
A lower-case 'k' is used in SI to represent 'kilo' (103).You will see used in symbols such as kW (kilowatts), kV (kilovolts), etc.
1kva means 1kv per ampere therefore 1 amp flowing and 1 kv deduce to be the product of the two or 1kw
2,100 volts = 2.1 kv
3 Kv = 3,000 volts.