Yes, a 130 watt fan can be plugged into a 120 volt receptacle. The current draw will be I = W/E, Amps = Watts/Volts = 130/120 = 1.08 amps.
A watt is a unit of power, and power is given by P = IV where P is power, I is current and V is voltage. Therefore, P = (15A)*(120V) = 1800V*A = 1800W
W = Amps times Volts. A = W/V, A = 300/120 = 2.5 amps
There are zero amps in a watt. I = W/E. W = A x V. It depends on how many volts there are. Since watts is amps times volts, amps is watts divided by volts. If you had a 120V circuit with 1 watt, there would be 1/120, or 0.00833 amps flowing in that circuit Note: This is the resistive answer, with a power factor of 1. For reactive loads, things change, but the basic question is answered.
This depends on the voltage ... amps = watts / volts 660 W / 110 V = 6 amps 660 W / 220 V = 3 amps 660 W / 330 KV = 2 mA
The formula you are looking for is I = W/E. Amps = Watts/Volts.
Yes, a 130 watt fan can be plugged into a 120 volt receptacle. The current draw will be I = W/E, Amps = Watts/Volts = 130/120 = 1.08 amps.
A watt is a unit of power, and power is given by P = IV where P is power, I is current and V is voltage. Therefore, P = (15A)*(120V) = 1800V*A = 1800W
W = Amps times Volts. A = W/V, A = 300/120 = 2.5 amps
There are zero amps in a watt. I = W/E. W = A x V. It depends on how many volts there are. Since watts is amps times volts, amps is watts divided by volts. If you had a 120V circuit with 1 watt, there would be 1/120, or 0.00833 amps flowing in that circuit Note: This is the resistive answer, with a power factor of 1. For reactive loads, things change, but the basic question is answered.
This depends on the voltage ... amps = watts / volts 660 W / 110 V = 6 amps 660 W / 220 V = 3 amps 660 W / 330 KV = 2 mA
Using the equation Volts X Amps = Watts, you can take 3000 watts / Volts to get your answer: 3000W/240V = 12.5A or 3000W/120V = 25A So, at 240 volts you will use 12.5 amps for 3000 watts of power. Or at 120 volts you will use 25 watts.
The formula you are looking for is I = W/E. Amps = Watts/Volts.
The formula you are looking for is I = W/E. Amps = Watts/Volts.
The formula you are looking for is W = Amps x Volts.
Slightly more than 11 amps. <<>> I = W/E I = 2500000/220 = 11364 amps
Use the formula A = W/V, where A is amps, W is watts and V is voltage.