In an average home in North America the oven and range are fed from a 40 amp breaker. As the appliances are 240 volt this will allow the appliances to be in the 240 x 40 = 9600 x 80% loading = 7680 watt range.
Most of the new convection ovens use a 40 amp circuit which is fed by a #8 copper wire.
Up to 40 amps if both large elements are on.
It depends on the power of the oven, so you'd need to know that first.
Then the current = (power in Watts) / Voltage.
Look on the manufacturer's nameplate. There it will tell you what the amperage is. If only watts is shown and not amperage use the following equation, Amps = Watts/Volts.
4.34
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1100 watts or about ten amps then another 3 to 4 amps for turn table light and fan
It won't run a microwave at all. Microwaves require an a.c. supply of 230 V (Europe) or 120 V (N America).
about 3 or 4
Could be about 13 amps at 240 v.
When the manufacturers refer to a 1000 watt oven they usually mean heat into food. The efficiency of ovens vary but it is quite common that a 1000 watt would consume 2000 watts from the mains. Watts = Amps X Volts so at 120V this would be 16.67 amps. But to be more accurate you need to find the actual input power of the oven.
Amps for an oven are governed by the total wattage of the oven and what the voltage supply to the oven is.
In UK voltage, a single oven would use somewhere between, 10-15 amperes and a double oven, 30-40.
1100 watts or about ten amps then another 3 to 4 amps for turn table light and fan
10 amps
You would be really pushing it and could not use both at the same time. I can't imagine electrical code allow that.
a regular toaster uses about 12.5 amps
50 amps
Average amps for a toaster oven
It won't run a microwave at all. Microwaves require an a.c. supply of 230 V (Europe) or 120 V (N America).
about 3 or 4
5.8 amps x 120 volts = 696 watts
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