That's like asking how many meters in a liter.
Ampere and Volt are two DIFFERENT measurements.
Ampere is how much electricity you are using, while volts are how much pressure the electricity is under(Think water).
If you want to figure out how many amperes your appliance is using you could use this formula: P=UxI (Watt=Volt x Ampere) or U=RxI(Volt=Resistance x Ampere).
Since the equation for watts is: Volts * Amps = Watts that would mean 12 Volts * 1 Amp = 12 Watts
Ampere-hours is a battery hold-up time rating. Volts is a voltage rating. The two are not related, so the question cannot be answered as asked.
You can not convert Watts (Power) to Ampere-Hours (Amount of charge)!!! Exept if you know the voltage and the amount of time you use the power. For example: If you use P=216 W from a battery of V=12 Volts for t=1 hour, that would be: Current I=P/V=216/12=18 Amperes In time of 1 hour, you will take Q=I*t=18 Ampere-Hours from the 12 Volts battery.
ohm is used to measure resistance of electric current. Ampere is used to measure electric current. volt is used to measure voltage.
The 5 amp fuse has many wattages that it can protect. It depends on the voltage of the circuit that the fuse is protecting. Use the following formula, Watts = Volts x Amps. For example 120 volts x 5 amps = 600 watts, 240 volts x 5 amps = 1200 watts, 480 volts x 5 amps = 2400 watts and 600 volts x 5 amps = 3000 watts.
.63 ampere draw @ 7 volts
Yes, ampere will go down.
Yes, that is safe.
30 amps.
Ampere-hours is a battery hold-up time rating. Volts is a voltage rating. The two are not related, so the question cannot be answered as asked.
Volts; The Ampere is the unit for current in charge per second.
You can not convert Watts (Power) to Ampere-Hours (Amount of charge)!!! Exept if you know the voltage and the amount of time you use the power. For example: If you use P=216 W from a battery of V=12 Volts for t=1 hour, that would be: Current I=P/V=216/12=18 Amperes In time of 1 hour, you will take Q=I*t=18 Ampere-Hours from the 12 Volts battery.
It depends on the amount of amps... you have to multiply the voltage (V) with the ampere (I) to get the power (P) in watts.
Sure, but of course this will be 100,000 watts.
Yes as long as it is 12 volts.
1000
I am not sure what you mean, but ampere is a unit of current, not of energy. In the case of a constant current, if the current is 1 ampere in a second, it will be 1 ampere in an hour, or in a day.