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A 15 amp switch can safely handle up to 1400 resistive watts.
To answer this question a voltage must be given. 25 amps drawn by a bulb seem to be on the high side.
A 15 amp circuit breaker will handle this situation very well. The smallest home breaker is rated at 15 amp.
An 8000 watt generator at regular house current 110v will supply 72 amps.
yes it can
This question does is not answerable. A watt is a volt times an amp. With out knowing how many amps the bulbs use there is no answer.
It's actually a good idea to have a speaker that can handle higher wattage than the amp can produce.
To answer this question, you need to know how many amps the circuit that is connected to the light bulb can handle. For home applications with a 15 amp circuit and no other loads connected you get: Power = Current * voltage, Substituting the known information yields: power = 15 amps * 110 volts, which is 1650 watts of total capacity. You have 100 watt bulbs, so: 1650/100 = 16.5 bulbs If your circuit is other than 15 amps, or if there is additional loads on the circuit, you must adjust the current or total capacity accordingly
A 15 amp switch can safely handle up to 1400 resistive watts.
To answer this question a voltage must be given. 25 amps drawn by a bulb seem to be on the high side.
That depends on the voltage.
In most cases, the speakers should be able to handle more watts than the amp can deliver. Doing it the other way around will blow out the speakers.
Yes I do not see why not as long as the in line fuse does not exceed the power the amp is pulling. You want the fuse to blow instead of the amp so you need a fuse that can only handle 1600 watts or the equivalent to....
Depend on watt and voltage use of light bulbs. You can use this ohm's law formular to calculate the current draw on light bulbs. I (current in amp) = P (watt)/ E (voltage) If 25W light bulb use in 115V AC (resident home) then current draw will be: 25/115 = 0.22A or 22 miliamperes. Hope this help.
yes
As long as the voltages match a 60 amp service will handle a 700 watt microwave. The microwave will only draw A = W/V, A = 700/120 = 5.8 amps.
700 watt is 0.93871 horespower