Not sure what you are asking here. Are you talking about fuses? Is this in a vehicle or in a house? Are you in America or in a country that uses 240 Volts instead of 110?
The ohms will usually stay the same unless the Amps are somehow effecting the temperature. The Amps will always change with the volts.
The amps will be the same. Volts will depend on between which two points you're measuring it.
all the sockets are always connected in parallel,due to this the voltage across each soket is same. when any socket is open then there is no voltage loss..so the votage is same like line voltage.
No. The Intel Pentium 4 line was produced for three sockets. The shortlived Socket 423, Socket 478, and LGA 775 (sometimes called Socket T).
Yes, the amps stay the same but the voltage doubles. If you connect in parallel the volts stay the same and the amps double.
The Flow of electrons through the line. Now if you have say 45 amps moving through a 20 gage line. It will over heat and loss a lot of power. But if you move the same amps through a 8 gage line then the Heat will not build up and the line will stay cooler. So you will not lose power.
You can but it is a waste of money. Across the line voltages for small HP motors is low. 5HP motor, 200 V = 17.5 amps, 230 V = 15.2 amps, 460 V = 7.6 amps and 575 V = 6.1 amps. Multiply these amperages by 300% for starting inrush and you see that the current is still not high enough to draw down the line voltage and effect other consumers on the same line.
6 amps.
Could be zero, could be 1000 amps. Amps are not the same thing as volts.
no
They can be in the same box. Amps are measured in series and volts in parallel.
Socket A or Socket 462 (same thing, different names).