A good AA battery has about 1.5 volts across it.
A "C" battery has a 1.5 Volts same with AAA, AA, and D batteries.
About 11,000
UM 3 is a battery size used in Japan, corresponding to the AA of the more common standard.
No, a double "a" battery is a 1.5V battery.No, a double "a" battery is a 1.5V battery.
The`D' sized battery, `AA", `AAA` and `C' sized batteries are manufactured to have a nominal 1.5 volts.AnswerThe electromotive force (open-circuit voltage) produced by a cell is a function of the materials used in the manufacture of its electrodes, and has nothing whatsoever to do with it physical size.The electrochemical series of metals lists the potentials of various metal electrodes in comparison with a hydrogen electrode, which serves as a zero reference. For example, the simplest cell has a copper electrode and a zinc electrode. From the electochemical series, the potential of copper is found to be +0.34 V, and the potential of zinc is found to be -0.76 V. So, the potential difference between a copper and zinc electrode will be 0.34 - (-0.76) = 1.1 V.The physical size of a battery (e.g. AAA, AA, etc.), providing they are of the same type, is a measure of the cell's charge capacity (expressed in ampere hours) and not of its emf.
1.5 volts
A single AA battery will produce 1.5 volts. In series the voltage is additive. In parallel the voltage remains the same but the batteries total capacity is increased.
Generally 1.5 volts
A "C" battery has a 1.5 Volts same with AAA, AA, and D batteries.
3 AA batteries provide about 4.5 volts. The amps depend on the load but for D-cells a load of 10 amps can be sustained for short periods.
No, not on 1 AA battery which only outputs 1.5 volts. Connect 8 AA batteries together in Series and you will have 12 volts.
That depends on the battery. A car battery makes 12 volts. An AA cell battery makes 1.5 volts.
All AA batteries are 1.5v "though it should say so on the label"
4,000 volts. Depending on the brand name, and how many times it has been recharged, or if it is lithiam nitrait.
depends on the kind of battery. a regular battery (aa,aaa,d,c) should supply 1.5 volts. a car battery should supply 12 volts
AA zinc and alkaline batteries normally provide 1.5 Volts when they are new. The voltage will drop as the battery discharges. Rechargeable batteries using NiCad or NiMH technology deliver 1.2 Volts when fully charged. Again, the voltage will drop as they discharge. It is this small voltage difference that can make rechargeable batteries less effective for some voltage sensitive applications,
The D Battery has more nikon in it