To answer this question the voltage of the compressor is needed.
Look at the motor nameplate and it shoud have the amp draw on it. If the nameplate is missing, then the amp draw depends on what type of motor it is. The basic calculation to get you in the ball park would be as follows: 1 HP = 0.75 KW 7.5 HP = 5.63 KW Assume the efficiency of the motor is 80%, then the power supplied will need to be 5.63/0.8 = 7.04 KW amp draw = 7040/220 = 32 amps <<>> For calculation purposes the electrical code book states that a 7.5 HP motor draws 40 amps.
Only if your amp is rated to handle a 1 ohm load. If it's not you WILL... fry your amp.
A 1-amp adaptor can not be used for equipment that draws more than 1 amp. It is not clear from the question which part of your system is 12 v and which is 20 v.
1 tr is equivalent to how many hp?
Everything Depends on the voltage supply ...... Current flow (Amp) = Watt / Voltage the Current flow will be 1 amp if voltage is 1 V the Current flow will be 0.5 amp if voltage is 2 V the Current flow will be 0.25 amp if voltage is 4 V and so on.......
If i`m in the correct is 1/3 hp.
To answer this question a voltage is needed. 1 HP = 746 Watts. Amps = Watts/Volts.
It could be a single phase 1/4 HP motor running on 230 volts AC.
Depends on refrigerator. Some are 1/25 others could be 1/40, still others could be higher. There is a data plate on the compressor that will tell you the HP.
The LRA could be around 15 to 20amps but this can vary , to get the precise LRA for your specific compressor you can check the technical specification provided the manufacturer
About 3 amps, maybe slightly less.
Look at the motor nameplate and it shoud have the amp draw on it. If the nameplate is missing, then the amp draw depends on what type of motor it is. The basic calculation to get you in the ball park would be as follows: 1 HP = 0.75 KW 7.5 HP = 5.63 KW Assume the efficiency of the motor is 80%, then the power supplied will need to be 5.63/0.8 = 7.04 KW amp draw = 7040/220 = 32 amps <<>> For calculation purposes the electrical code book states that a 7.5 HP motor draws 40 amps.
It is rated 1/2+ hp. meaning slightly more than 1/2. Horsepower ratings for Tecumseh can be elusive, some write-ups like to round them up to the next standard, such as 3/4 hp, which is not technically accurate.
3 amps on 120 volts is almost 1/2 hp. To be exact 0.48 hp, that's why I said almost 0.5 hp or 1/2 hp. So say you are thinking of buying a 3 amp grinder or table top sander and you want to know about how many HP (Horse Power) it is, the answer is 120 volts X 3 amps = 360 X 0.00134 = 0.4824 HP which is almost a 1/2 HP you can do the math from there if its a 6 amp motor then its almost a 1 HP motor or to be exact 0.4824 X 2 = 0.9648 also almost 1 HP. This is if you are on 120 volts. If you are on 110 or 125 volts its about the same.
First of all, circuit breakers are rated in amps, not horsepower. Theequivalent between HP and electricity is 1 HP = 746 watts. That is a 1 HP motor requires 746 watts of power to operate it , regardless of the voltage. If you have a 250 amp circuit breaker, it is likely the main breaker to your residential panel. (?) The potential HP the panel could provide could be determined by multiplying the 250 amps times the panels voltage (208,220, 240) and divide the sum by 746.
i know it's not so much pedals as rack mounts and such. i think MCIS sound was sourced at using a mesa boogie amp and Alesis compressor combined with a JMP-1 preamp. i know it's not so much pedals as rack mounts and such. i think MCIS sound was sourced at using a mesa boogie amp and Alesis compressor combined with a JMP-1 preamp.
At peak power it should draw 1.36 amp at power factor 1 or more realistically 1.7 amp at power factor 1.7.