Want this question answered?
Use a voltmeter and ammeter to measure the supply voltage and load current drawn by the motor. The product of these two readings will give you the apparent power in volt amperes. Then use a wattmeter to determine the true power of the machine, in watts. The reactive power, in reactive volt amperes, will then be the vector difference between the apparent power and the true power. 4hp = 1 KVAR, so for 25 hp, 25/4= 6025 KVAR
You need to specify the rating , voltage and phases of the motor to answer this question.
hp or power is torque/time (rotating motor) 3000# can be lifted 10' in a minute with 1Hp 30,000# can be lifted 1' in a minute with 1Hp 1000 tons can be lifted 1' in an hour with 1 hp
1 HP is 746 watts in principle. The power is in watts, and the power is the volts times the amps. For an AC motor the power is the volts times the amps times the power factor times a factor that depends on the power-conversion efficiency of the motor.
HP/.00134= Watts Then Watts divided by Volts = AMPS For expample. a .75 HP electric motor running on 220VAC uses 2.544 amps .75 / .00134 = 559.7015 Watts then 559.7015 / 220 = 2.544
Use a voltmeter and ammeter to measure the supply voltage and load current drawn by the motor. The product of these two readings will give you the apparent power in volt amperes. Then use a wattmeter to determine the true power of the machine, in watts. The reactive power, in reactive volt amperes, will then be the vector difference between the apparent power and the true power. 4hp = 1 KVAR, so for 25 hp, 25/4= 6025 KVAR
Is this a motor, or is it a generator? You should look at the nameplate. Generators are typically spec'd at .8 - .9 pf. Motors can run as low as .6pf. A 400hp motor definitely should have this information handy with it.
spark plug gap for a 1996 mercury 30 hp outboard motor?
You need to specify the rating , voltage and phases of the motor to answer this question.
300 hp depends what done to it
On the hood
.030
This answer depends on the characteristics of the motor. There are may different applications for motors and though the HP remains the same, the full load amps differ. If you have the FLA of the 5 HP motor then an answer can be given.
50:1
1 HP electric motor = 1.5 HP hydraulic motor so for a 3 HP electric motor you would need a 4.5 HP hydraulic motor. Also for your information a 1 HP hydraulic motor = 1 2/3 HP gasoline engine.
Varies with motor-the bigger it is the less req'd to achieve that level.
30 hp 295 cc