There is a small current draw taking place to keep the dusk to dawn circuit activated.
It will draw 150 watts. The capacitor is there only to increase the voltage enough to "excite" the free electrons in the gas to ignite.
Depends on the size of the LED light and the voltage applied. An example is an LED 24 volt globe light that pulls 8 watts which draw 0.333333 amps. Take an LED 120 volt light bulb draws 12 watts and will pull 0.1 amps. The same bulb at 240 volts wil draw 0.05 amps. it really depends on the watts and voltage applied. An average would be about 0.1 amps.
Your question answers itself... 1000 watts, when operated on a 480-volt source..
1100 watts or about ten amps then another 3 to 4 amps for turn table light and fan
the older furnaces would draw 700 watts plus depending on the size of the blower. the newer furnaces with variable speed blowers can draw as little as 100 watts
To calculate the amperage draw, you need to know the voltage of the circuit where the 2500 watts appliance will be used. You can use the formula: Amps = Watts / Volts. For example, if it is a 120V circuit, the amperage draw would be 2500 watts / 120 volts = 20.83 amps.
Watts = Amps x volts. What is the current draw and voltage of the calculator.
the older furnaces would draw 700 watts plus depending on the size of the blower. the newer furnaces with variable speed blowers can draw as little as 100 watts
approximately 1440 watts. Or a 12 amp draw @120 volts ac. Older units will draw more current. This is the draw after start up.
Watts is the amount of power the heater has and amps would be the draw- if it is a 120 volt heater than the amps would be 12.5 amps and it is instantaneous
Yes, deer are generally not attracted to light sources. They are more active during dawn and dusk, but artificial lights do not typically draw them in.
Amps = Watts/Volts55/12= 4.583333