A car battery has usually 12 volts.
A TV will use all the volts you give it. The amount of power on the other hand varies greatly depending on type and vintage.
Ummm .. How does an electric ray use its electricity ?
well it is measuring the amount of electricity energy used
American use both watts and volts to measure units of electricity.
You can't calculate how many volts with that information; you could calculate the energy - 60 watts for 15 minutes is equivalent to 54,000 joules.
Yes, it will use electricity. However, it may have a battery, in which case you will not always need to have it plugged in. If it does not have a battery, it will use one of your cars plugs.
Yes, some cars CAN use electricity. However, it is only a developing invention so they might still have to run partially on gasoline.
No. Australia's electricity supply is 230 volts at 50Hz... america's is 120 volts at 60Hz.
If you use the definition of electricity as; The supply of electric current to a house or other building for heating, lighting, or powering appliances, then any voltage will fit into this range.
No, the hybrid cars do not use as much gas as a regular car. Electric cars use a number of batteries to store usable electricity to cut the need of gas to power cars by a significant fraction.
If you use the definition of electricity as; The supply of electric current to a house or other building for heating, lighting, or powering appliances, then any voltage will fit into this range.
it would depend on the calculator the Casio basic scientific calculator uses 1.5 volts of electricity