Sure, but of course this will be 100,000 watts.
if you connect a 0.5 ohm load to it, the power supply will try to push 4 amps through it. but 4 amps@ 2 volts is quite a lot, and it may not succeed.
The amps drawn by a 65 watt light bulb should be 65/120 or 0.54167. This fraction of an ampere may be restated as 541.67 milli-amps.
You cannot convert watts to amps, since watts are power and amps are coulombs per second (like converting gallons to miles). HOWEVER, if you have at least least two of the following three: amps, volts and watts then the missing one can be calculated. Since watts are amps multiplied by volts, there is a simple relationship between them.
10000 or 10000. Although it may also be written as 10000.0, the second version implies a greater degree of accuracy.
This can vary widely depending on the specific appliance. For example, a laptop may have a current rating of around 2-3 amps, while a hairdryer may have a current rating of 10-15 amps. It's important to check the manufacturer's specifications or the appliance's label to determine its specific current rating.
A: It may tattoo your face when it blow up if the 25 volts is used where a 50 volts should be, you may substitute 47 mfd 500 volts for the 50volts cap and the 25 volts cap But you cannot substitute 15 volts for the 25 volts capacitor
From the stand to stand I would say about, 1,000,000 Volts. This may not be correct
6,213.7 miles.
If the national average cost of consumer electricity is 13 cents per kilowatt hour and you are attempting to charge a 12 volt 70 amp hour car battery, then the cost of charging the battery may be calculated. The battery is imperfect and will require about a third more than its ampere hour rating to fully charge it. Assume it will take 100 ampere hours to charge the 70 ampere hour battery. At a charge voltage is necessarily above the battery voltage, usually at about 16 volts, and 100 ampere hours, the result is 1600 watt hours or 1.6 KWH The cost is then 20.8 cents to charge the battery calculated from 1.6 KWH times 13 cents per KWH.
no way not in a 10000 years no way not in a 10000 years no way not in a 10000 years
107,639.1 ft2
General Aviation typically uses 24 volts. Even the Boeing 777 uses 24 volts while the newer 787 is 32 volts.