At what voltage? When you know the voltage then, to get the amps those kilovolt-amps contain, you simply divide the kilovolt-amps by the voltage.
20.44 kva
4.6605 kva
kVA = 1000va Therefore 1000/220 Answer 4.54A
50 kVA is 16.667 kVA per phase and you divide that by the phase voltage. Current = 16667 / 277 = 60 Amps
70,000 Volt Amps
20.44 kva
500 KVA how many amps? almost 650 Amps according to formula.
62.5 amps
4.6605 kva
The formula you are looking for is , A = kva x 1000/Volts.
kVA = 1000va Therefore 1000/220 Answer 4.54A
Amperes when kva is shown. The formula is, Amps = kva x 1000/1.73 x volts.
To answer this question a voltage value must be stated. Divide the voltage into 50 KVA and your answer will be in amps.
50 kVA is 16.667 kVA per phase and you divide that by the phase voltage. Current = 16667 / 277 = 60 Amps
Take the KVA and divide it by the voltage. 25/.230 = 109 amps. The transformer can put out up to 50% more that its rated for short durations. So you could get around 150 amps out of a 25 Kva tranformer in a worst case situation.
It depends on the rated voltage of its secondary.
Amps * volts / 1000