"kV" is referring to voltage, "KW" is referring to power. This is synonomous with asking "how many apples are in the tree?" without giving any more information about the tree, or back to your question, the current.
There are 0.001 KV in one V.
2,100 volts = 2.1 kv
3 Kv = 3,000 volts.
20,000 volts = 20 kv
To convert kilovolts (kV) to volts (V), you multiply by 1,000. Therefore, 0.006 kV is equal to 0.006 × 1,000 = 6 volts.
13,800 volts 1 kv = 1 kilovolt = 1000 volts
Considering it is kw for kilowatt and not kv. 1 megawatt = 1000 kilowatt.
The k in kV stands for 1,000 and the v stands for volts. Divide 25,000 by 1,000 you get 25 kv.
Multiples of 11 kV are used in many countries. The idea is to deliver a round number of volts so you add on 10% to allow for line losses. So 10 kV becomes 11 kV. In practice lines are operated without a 10% voltage drop now because it represents an unacceptable waste of energy, but we have stuck with 11 kV etc. Common supply voltages used for area distribution are 6.6 kV, 11 kV, 33 kV, 66 kV and 132 kV.
There is no city KV. KV stands for Kilo Volts
4160 volts
Ground clearance132 kv - 6100 mm220 kv - 7015mm400 kv - 8840mm765 kv - 15000mm