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20 watts is equal to 20/1000 = .020 kilowatts.
Uh, is this a trick question? I believe a kilowatt is a thousand watts, therefore, I believe, 240 watts is equal to about .25 kilowatts. Correct me if I'm wrong.
It depends on the voltage.Amps times volts equal watts
One watt is 0.001 kilowatt. 65 watts is 0.065 kilowatts. It does not matter what the voltage is - watts are watts.
Kilowatts of power can flow continuously so there is no such thing as kilowatts per hour, but energy is measured in kilowatt-hours (kilowatts times the number of hours). On a 120 v system 150 amps represents 150x120 watts, 18,000 watts or 18 kW. On a 240 v system the same current represents 150x240 watts, 36,000 watts or 36 kW. With certain types of load the kW is a bit less than kV times amps, by a factor called the power factor.
On a 120 v supply 320 watts is 320/120 amps, or 2.667 amps. On a 240 v supply the current is 320/240 amps, or 1.333 amps.
Power (Watts) = Current X VoltageSo 7 X 240 = 16801680w
A three wire home distribution service rated at 100 amps has a wattage capacity of;From L1 to L2 at 240 volts x 100 amps = 24000 watts or 24 kilowatts. From L1 to neutral at 120 volts x 100 amps = 12000 watts or 12 kilowatts. From L2 to neutral at 120 volts x 100 amps = 12000 watts or 12 kilowatts.
A three wire home distribution service rated at 100 amps has a wattage capacity of;From L1 to L2 at 240 volts x 100 amps = 24000 watts or 24 kilowatts. From L1 to neutral at 120 volts x 100 amps = 12000 watts or 12 kilowatts. From L2 to neutral at 120 volts x 100 amps = 12000 watts or 12 kilowatts.
It depends on the voltage.Amps times volts equal watts
One watt is 0.001 kilowatt. 65 watts is 0.065 kilowatts. It does not matter what the voltage is - watts are watts.
Kilowatts of power can flow continuously so there is no such thing as kilowatts per hour, but energy is measured in kilowatt-hours (kilowatts times the number of hours). On a 120 v system 150 amps represents 150x120 watts, 18,000 watts or 18 kW. On a 240 v system the same current represents 150x240 watts, 36,000 watts or 36 kW. With certain types of load the kW is a bit less than kV times amps, by a factor called the power factor.
On a 120 v supply 320 watts is 320/120 amps, or 2.667 amps. On a 240 v supply the current is 320/240 amps, or 1.333 amps.
Power (Watts) = Current X VoltageSo 7 X 240 = 16801680w
Current (amps) = power (watts) / voltage = 100/240 = 0.42 amps
Electric furnaces are rated in Kilowatts. The following formula will let you figure it out. Watts = amps x volts. For eg. a 10 Kw furnace draws 10000 watts. amps = watts/volts. 10000/240 = 41.6 amps. If your furnace differs from this example, just plug in your wattage and you will have your answer.
4000 watts on a 240 v system would be 4000/240 amps, 17 amps.
To find amps if watts and volts are known, use the formula; watts / volts = amps or 5000 / 240 = 20.83 amps
You need the formula: Amps * Volts = Watts But you get to do the math.