200 amps is equal to zero kva. To answer this question a voltage is needed.
This depends on the voltage.
There is appoximately zero kVA in 14amp, .5 volt AC.
KVA is a measure of power, while amp (or ampere) is a measure of current. KVA meanes kiloVoltAmps. 1 kVA = 1000 V*A. so 225 KVA = 225,000 VA (volts * amperes) So you would need to also know the voltage, in order to find the amperes.
KVA is kilo volt amp, and one needs to know both the voltage and the amperage, and possibly the phase angle. It is comparable with kilowatts for a resistive load.
Some confusion hereKW and KVA are units of power. The ampere is a unit of current. If you divide power by the voltage involved, you can determine the current involved, in amps. Power (watts) = volts x ampsA volt-amp is a watt. (A volt times an amp is a watt.)I=(KVA*1000)/(1.732*V) (Three Phase)AMP=KW/1000*V*PF--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------KW or KVA can be converted to one another but you cannot convert them to amps. You can compute amps by using this formula,KW = I x V x 1.732 x P.F/1000 (Three phase)KVA = I x V x 1.732/1000 (Three phase)
1kva means 1kv per ampere therefore 1 amp flowing and 1 kv deduce to be the product of the two or 1kw
There is appoximately zero kVA in 14amp, .5 volt AC.
kva and kw are related as KVA = (KW/PF) pf:power factor
Insufficient information. It depends on the nominal line voltage and the power factor of the loads in the various houses.
im have a 30 kva transformer 3 phase 480v 80 amp panel 120v what size disconnect should I use
KVA is a measure of power, while amp (or ampere) is a measure of current. KVA meanes kiloVoltAmps. 1 kVA = 1000 V*A. so 225 KVA = 225,000 VA (volts * amperes) So you would need to also know the voltage, in order to find the amperes.
i try ......gen set 120 KVA and output 415 Volt 1 KVA = 0.8KW so 120 x 0.8 = 96 kW A = w/v ~ A = 96000/415 = 231.3 Amp I' it right ? If wrong give correction
kW = I x E x pf/1000. Taking pf as .9 you get, 200 x 240 x .9/1000 = 43.2. The standard transformer for a 200 amp service is 50 KVA
S= (1/1000) UI √3Where S in kVA; U in V; I in A; hence I= 1000S/ (U √3)
KVA is kilo volt amp, and one needs to know both the voltage and the amperage, and possibly the phase angle. It is comparable with kilowatts for a resistive load.
It equals zero without a voltage.
There is zero amps in one kilo volt amp. The terminology of KVA is (K) kilo meaning one thousand, (V) for volt and (A) for amperage. What is missing from the equation is a given voltage. Formula for finding the answer is I = (VA or W)/V .
Some confusion hereKW and KVA are units of power. The ampere is a unit of current. If you divide power by the voltage involved, you can determine the current involved, in amps. Power (watts) = volts x ampsA volt-amp is a watt. (A volt times an amp is a watt.)I=(KVA*1000)/(1.732*V) (Three Phase)AMP=KW/1000*V*PF--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------KW or KVA can be converted to one another but you cannot convert them to amps. You can compute amps by using this formula,KW = I x V x 1.732 x P.F/1000 (Three phase)KVA = I x V x 1.732/1000 (Three phase)