91.34
VAC means volts AC, and is a measure of the voltage in an AC circuit.KVA means kilovolt-amperes, and is a measure of the power in a circuit. For a resistive load, KVA is the same as KW, or kilowatts.The two terms are not related in that you can not compare one to another without also knowing the current flowing in the AC circuit. VAC * IAC = KVA, when all values are in RMS (not peak to neutral or peak to peak quantities).
To convert kilovolts (kV) to kilovolt-amperes (kVA), you need to know the power factor of the system, as kVA accounts for both voltage and current in an AC system. Without a specified power factor, you cannot directly convert kV to kVA. However, if you assume a power factor of 1 (which is ideal), then 80 kV would be equal to 80 kVA in a purely resistive load scenario.
How much KVA generator is required to run two AC of 1.5 tone
There is appoximately zero kVA in 14amp, .5 volt AC.
kVA is kilo-volt-ampere, which is 1000 x volt x ampere. kVA is the unit of apparent power in AC circuits.
no
10 AC
Divide 2.2 kW by (an assumed, because you did not state it) power factor of 0.85 to get 2.6 kVA. Divide that by 3 to get 0.863 KVA per winding. Divide that by 415 volts to get 2.08 amperes per winding. If you are running star, then that is the phase current. If you are running delta, then multiply by the square root of 3 (1.732) to get 3.6 amperes per phase.
To convert AC tonnage to kVA and kW, use the following formulas: For kVA: kVA = (tonnage x 3.517) For kW: kW = (tonnage x 3.517 x power factor). Remember to consider the power factor of the system when converting from tonnage to kVA and kW.
KVA is very simple, it is the Volts x Amps of an AC circuit in units of 1000. For a single phase AC circuit VA = E x I. KVA = (ExI)/1000 So if you have 120 VAC and 15 A then: VA = 120 x 15 = 1800; KVA = 1800/1000 = 1.8 For 3 phase circuits we need to add the square of 3 (= 1.732) as a factor. VA = 1.732 x E x I and KVA = (1.732 x E x I)/1000 So if you have 480 VAC and 23 A then: VA = 1.732 x 480 x 23 = 19,121; KVA = 19,121/1000 = 19.1 Note that KVA is higher than KW (true power) in circuits that are not purely resistive. The vector difference of the two is "Power factor".
Yes, you can use both, but watts is more useful; it provides the total amount of power the generator can output.
Type your answer here... 7 amperes