they are two different things.
P=EI. MEANS POWER EQUALS VOLTAGE TIME AMPERAGE .9 X 3.7 = 3.33 WATTS. 3.33 WATTS FOR ONE HOUR AT 3.7 volts
Yes all AAA batteries have 1.5volts but they differ in mah (milliampere-hour) according to their types.
If I remember right it is 1000 mah. 500 mah is .5 amps, 2000 mah is 2 amps and so on.
Mah - Kee Mah - Kee
No. 240 Volts was the nominal standard in Australia with a tolerance of +/- 10%, So the voltage could be anywhere between 216 Volts and 264 Volts. The change to 230 volts is part of international harmonisation between countries that use 220 volt standards and 240 volt Standards. The new tolerance levels are +10% and - 6%.
You will need a little more than 9 volts to kill a mosquito. It is recommended that you use about 2850 mAh of current to kill a mosquito.
P=EI. MEANS POWER EQUALS VOLTAGE TIME AMPERAGE .9 X 3.7 = 3.33 WATTS. 3.33 WATTS FOR ONE HOUR AT 3.7 volts
The Nintendo DS Battery: * Li-ion * 3.7 Volts DC * 850 mAh
Yes all AAA batteries have 1.5volts but they differ in mah (milliampere-hour) according to their types.
A milliamp-hour (mAh) is a measure of quality of a battery. It tells you how many hours the batter can provide one milliamp of current before it will die. A volt is the unit of electric potential. AA, AAA, C, and D batteries are all 1.5 Volts. A 9 Volt is 9 Volts. Car batteries are 12 Volts. AA's are typically rated in thousands of mAh. Cs and Ds are more, AAA and 9 Volts are typically less. If you know the power that a device consumes [i.e. Remote, wireless game controller], you can calculate how long your batters will last in the following manner. Time = [mAh / 1000] * [# of batteries * battery voltage] / device power Ex: Device is rated at 1W using 4 AA [1.5 Volt] batteries rated at 1000mAh. Time = [ 1000mAh / 1000 ] * [4 * 1.5 Volts] / 1 W = 6 Hours
1000 mAh is the capacity of the battery. A single rechargeable cell would give 1.5 volts, regardless of its capacity.
The milli-amp-hours rating has nothing to do with the voltage. The rating should be something like 3000 mah at 12V or 3000 mah at 1.5V. One common 3000 mAh battery is 3.0 volts; another is 3.7 volts. A common camcorder battery is 7.4 volts. Some DeWalt tools use 12 V 3000 mAh batteries.
Use a full wave bridge rectifier.
Mah Nà Mah Nà was created in 1968.
That is impossible. That are different things.
The ohms will usually stay the same unless the Amps are somehow effecting the temperature. The Amps will always change with the volts.
It has a lithium ion polymer battery but I don't know anything else about it besides that its 3.7 volts. Sorry but i don't know the mAH.