Amperes does not convert into volts they are two different values. Become familiar with the following formula and look at the relationships between the values. Volts = Amps x Resistance, Amps = Volts / Resistance and Resistance = Volts / Amps.
it is impossible to convert volts into amperes, because there are two different units of measurement. Volts refers, as you know, to voltage, or the electric potential difference between two points, and amperes refers to the current, or the intensity of the electric current. Its like trying to convert horses into donkeys.
To convert watts to amps a voltage value must be given. Amps = Watts/Volts. Amps = .011/Volts.
Please rephrase the question.AnswerYour question is similar to asking, "How do you convert kilometres to kilograms?" Volts and amperes measure two completely different quantities, so you cannot convert one to the other!
Amperes when kva is shown. The formula is, Amps = kva x 1000/1.73 x volts.
Pwer is volts times amperes. 120 volts times 10 amperes = 1.2 KW
It depends on how many amperes there are. If you have 1 amperes, then you get 260 watts. If you have 260 amperes, then you have 67,600 watts. If you have 0.001 amperes, then you have 0.26 watts. Its just watts = volts times amperes. Of course, the limiting factor is the available power behind the 260 volts, but you did not say anything about that.
V/R = I meaning, Voltage (in volts) divided by Resistance (in Ohms) equals Current (in Amperes, a.k.a. Amps
Watts = volts x amperes. So if your region uses 110 volts, 20 amperes is equivalent to 2200 watts; if your region uses 220 volts, 20 amperes is equivalent to 4400 watts.
Volts.
ohms = volts/amperes 6 ohms = 120 volts / 20 amperes
Please note that horsepower and amperes measure different things, so you can't just convert them directly. Convert the horsepower to watts. Then you can divide by the voltage used in your region - usually that's around 110 volts, or 220 volts, depending on the region - to get the amperes. This formula is correct for DC, and approximately correct for AC (in most common cases).
The relationship between amperes, volts, and watts is... watts = amperes * volts Confirming by looking at the fundamental units involved... watts (joules per second) = amperes (coulombs per second) * volts (joules per coulomb)