The volt-amps are equal to the volts times the amps, so you need to know the voltage as well as the current.
A volt-amp or VA is equivalent to watts, provided the voltage and amperage are in phase. So 1 kilo volt amp is the same as 1 kilowatt. Wattage, or power, is equal to volts times amps. So the original question is effectively nonsense. The number of amps depends on the voltage. If the voltage is 1000 volts, then there's 1 amp in 1 kilo volt amp. If the voltage is 1 volt, then there's 1000 amps. If there's 50 volts, then the amperage is 20 amps. And so on.
Volt-Amp is apparent power, in direct current Volt x Amps = power with unit of Watt. For Alternate Current Volt-Amp is generally different from real power because the power supply in wave form and might be out of phase and portion of energy is not usable. Volt-Amp is always higher or equal to real power in AC.
That depends on circuit voltage. 1 watt is equal to 1 volt times 1 amp.
That depends on circuit voltage. 1 watt is equal to 1 volt times 1 amp.
That depends on circuit voltage. 1 watt is equal to 1 volt times 1 amp.
That depends on circuit voltage. 1 watt is equal to 1 volt times 1 amp.
That depends on circuit voltage. 1 watt is equal to 1 volt times 1 amp.
That depends on circuit voltage. 1 watt is equal to 1 volt times 1 amp.
That depends on circuit voltage. 1 watt is equal to 1 volt times 1 amp.
2 to 4 amps.
That depends on circuit voltage. 1 watt is equal to 1 volt times 1 amp. 4 amps could be 4 watts at 1 volt, or 1000 watts at 250 volts.
a million.
Volts * Amps = Watts 12 Volt * 2 amp = 24 Watts
On a 12-volt system, ten amps. On a 120-volt system, one amp. On a 240-volt system, half an amp. You just multiply the volts by the amps to find the watts, for a simple thing like a bulb.
A VA is a volt-ampere, or volt-amp, and a kilo (K) is one thousand. This makes a KVA a kilovolt-ampere, or kilovolt-amp. If we have 1,000 volt-amps, and one volt times one amp is equal to one watt (W), which it is, 1,000 volt-amps is equal to 1,000 watts, or 1 KW. All that said, 1 KVA is equal to 1 KW.Sometimes in an ac system, the watts is less than the volts times the amps, and in that case the watts is equal to the volts times the amps times the power factor. The power factor is less than one. The power factor for a typical electric motor is 0.7, so then there are only 700 watts in a kVA.
As many as you like. They are not equivalent. They are different things, you have to take the volts and multiply by the current in amps to find the power in watts. So 1 volt with 1 amp of current is 1 watt, or ¼ volt with 4 amps, etc.
Milli volt is one thousandth of a Volt and Milli amp is one thousandth of an Amp. Volt and Amp measure two different things and are not really comparable. Over simplified, here is how it works. Volt measures the 'pressure' that causes current to flow. Current flow is measured in Amps and depends on the how much resistance the 'pressure' has to overcome. Higher the resistance, lesser the current (Amp) for same pressure (Volt)
It's the amps that are controlled by the breaker not the volts. You can have a 600 volt 15 amp breaker, you can have a 347 volt 15 amp breaker. The breaker will trip when you exceed 15 AMPS.
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.
80% of the rated circuit. 10 amp circuit is 8 amps, 20 amp circuit is 16 amps, etc.
Formula use to calculate Watts Watts = Amp * Volt In your case 4.3 * 230 = 989 Watts.
No. At 125 volts, the same 15 amp current results in 10 times as much power. Ohm's Law states that amps x volts = power.