The amount of voltage needed to lift a car with an electromagnet depends on several factors. The size of the coil, as well as the amperage will need to be factored in to know how much voltage will be used.
They can come with very different voltages.
The equation that you are looking for is I = W/E. Amps = Watts / Volts.
It is not the voltage it is the amperage that kills.
To answer this question the voltage of the generator is needed. I = W/E. I = 40000/Volts
9000 BTU/hour is equivalent to 2300 watts so the heater will draw 10 amps on 230 volts.
To answer this question a voltage is needed. 1 HP = 746 Watts. Amps = Watts/Volts.
It had better be in joules. Watts and volts are not units of energy. yes, but how many as in ? joules/sec
Two wires are needed for 220 volts.
Zero. Watts is the product of Amps x Volts. As you can see an amperage value is needed. Voltage = Watts/Amps. Volts = 200/? 20 volts
The equation that you are looking for is I = W/E. Amps = Watts / Volts.
I believe is 12 to 14 volts.
3 things Volts, ohms, and amps
4,000 volts. Depending on the brand name, and how many times it has been recharged, or if it is lithiam nitrait.
the magnetic field of a magnet is measured through Gaussmeters.
The electric furnace operates on 240 volts so a two pole breaker is needed.
The number of pulleys needed to lift a load varies based on the size of the load. A very small load can be lifted with just one pulley while large loads may require many pulleys to adequately lift the load.
General Aviation typically uses 24 volts. Even the Boeing 777 uses 24 volts while the newer 787 is 32 volts.
This depends on the size of the generator itself. The smaller the generator, the more RPM's will be needed to generate 200 volts in an A/C system.