Want this question answered?
How do you calculate voltage drop for starting motor current
Not enough information. Power = current x voltage. Since voltage can be anything, there is no way to calculate power. Time is irrelevant; though once you have the power, it can help you calculate energy (energy = power x time).
Voltage x Current = Power So Power / voltage = current Now you do the math
AC stands for Alternating Current and DC stands for Direct Current.
please provide more detail, what do you mean low voltage? Also its not necessarily the voltage your worried about but the amount of current that can be supplied.
Power (watts) is voltage times current.
How do you calculate voltage drop for starting motor current
RPS is only the voltage& power controlled device. it can only used for set the input for our wish A device which can change its output according to the voltage supplied to it is called a voltage controlled device.ex. a voltage controlled current source,or a field effect transistor. In a voltage controlled current source the output current changes as the voltage supplied to it changes.
formals to calculate exciation voltage of alternator
You can apply a potential difference across a wire to cause a current to flow through. Ohm's Law allows you to calculate the amount of current based on the voltage supplied and the resistance of the circuit. I = current V = voltage or potential difference R = resistance I = V/R
Not enough information. Power = current x voltage. Since voltage can be anything, there is no way to calculate power. Time is irrelevant; though once you have the power, it can help you calculate energy (energy = power x time).
V = I x R V = voltage, I = Current, R = Resistance or it can be calculate like this V = P / I V = Voltage, P = Electric Power, I = Current
current=watts(power)/voltage
Devide the wattage by the voltage
V = I x R V = voltage, I = Current, R = Resistance or it can be calculate like this V = P / I V = Voltage, P = Electric Power, I = Current
Voltage x Current = Power So Power / voltage = current Now you do the math
The power dissipated across a resistor, or any device for that matter, is watts, or voltage times current. If you don't know one of voltage or current, you can calculate it from Ohm's law: voltage equals resistance times current. So; if you know voltage and current, power is voltage times current; if you know voltage and resistance, watts is voltage squared divided by resistance; and if you know current and resistance, watts is current squared times resistance.