There are, 2000/1000 = ,amps in 2000 milliamps.
For the math challenged that is 2 amps.
There are 1000 milliamperes in one ampere. Therefore, 200 milliamperes is equal to 200/1000 = 0.2 amperes.
.2 Amps = 200mA
200ma is .200 amps or .2 amps
P=I x E Watts = Amps X Volts So, 200Ma or .2A X 120v would be 24W Substitute any voltage to get the corrected power (Watts).
This varies between person to person, but it is small. Anywhere between 6 and 200ma across the hart will disrupt the heartbeat.
Amps = Watts / Volts Amps = 130000 / 480 Amps = 270.83
1000 Amps
200ma is .200 amps or .2 amps
P=I x E Watts = Amps X Volts So, 200Ma or .2A X 120v would be 24W Substitute any voltage to get the corrected power (Watts).
No No No. If your supply can give .2A, and you need 2 Amps, your supply's not going to cut it.
This varies between person to person, but it is small. Anywhere between 6 and 200ma across the hart will disrupt the heartbeat.
Yes, the maximum that the adapter can deliver is 1300 mA or 1.3 amps. The maximum that the device will draw is 200 mA or .2 of an amp.
YES!If you have a TV antenna amplifier rated at 12 Volts and 200 milliamps, you can use any power supply that will deliver at least 200 milliamps at 12 Volts. The important item is to keep the 12 volts at 12 volts. note: 200 milliamps is 0.2 amps. Even if you had a power supply that delivered 2000 amps at 12 volts you would be OK as it will only draw the 200ma that it needs.
Multiply the vots by the amps to find the volt-amps. Or divide the volt-amps by the voltage to find the amps.
Amps = Watts / Volts Amps = 130000 / 480 Amps = 270.83
.1 amps will give you .1 amps.
500 KVA how many amps? almost 650 Amps according to formula.
10-2 Amps
0.83 amps