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2 amps
There is a 3.75 Volt drop across each bulb.
None.
No real comparison. In simplistic terms the D cell 1.5 volt flashlight battery will produce around 15 ampere hours. A 12 volt automobile battery will produce from 300 cold cranking amps (CCA) to 800 CCA or more.
If you want to know the voltage of any battery you need a volt meter. These can be as cheap as 15- hundreds of dollars. Knowing the voltage still doesn't tell you if a rechargable battery is fully charged or not. a charger with an indicater can tell you that.
In North America you would need two 15 amp breakers to obtain 240 volts. The wire for a 15 amp circuit would be #14 AWG. So to answer the question, yes a 240 volt receptacle can go on a 15 amp circuit.
Yes as long as they are both 12 volt batteries.
When using the Inverter the CCU can be adapted to the users needs. A regular 12 volt battery would work on any small devices.
It will draw over 18 amps and will blow a 15 amp fuse.
A 15 amp circuit breaker should trip at 15 amps regardless of the load voltages or impedances. If you have 277 volts and 7 ohms, the current would be 39.5 amps and a 15 amp circuit breaker should trip.
The voltage of 277 volts is the wye voltage of a three phase 480 volt distribution. In the 480 volt CDP (Central Distribution Panel), you will need a 600 volt rated single pole 15 amp breaker installed in the CDP. The load will be connected to the output terminal of the breaker and the other conductor will be connected to the neutral bus in the CDP. The minimum size conductor for the 15 amp circuit will be a #12 copper conductor.
Eight on a 15 amp circuit, tweleve on a 20 amp circuit, including the gfci receptacle itself.