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Watts is determined by multiplying amps (found on tag with serial number or on data plate on compressor) by volts (example 115 volts times 9 amps= 1035 watts)
The Kenmore 84722 (Sears.com) is a 110Volt dryer. Note that because it only has 110 Volts (not the 240 Volts of a typical dryer) it will take a long time to dry, and the capacity is small. There is also a 110 Volt laundry center (with the same caveats) Kenmore 88732.Each unit also needs venting (permanent or temporary) to the outside.Additional answer:There are many clothes dryers that will operate on 110 volts - and they are usually ones with gas heaters. These include Maytag, Whirlpool, Kenmore, GE, Hotpoint, Haier, LG, Samsung and others.
The formula you are looking for is Watts = Amps x Volts.
There are zero watts in a small refrigerator. Watts are the produce to amps times volts. Without these values a correct answer can not be given.
the black wire is A phase, the red wire is B phase, and the white wire is the neutral. Black should have around 120 volts. Red should have 120 volts, and should add up to 240 volts with a multi meter.
Depending on size of Fridge. But AVERAGE is 12 volts for fridge, circuit necessity 15 amps 15 amps X 120 Volts=1800 watts minimum...I'm LEARNING myself
All of the information is on the nameplate that is located, probably on the back of the fridge. Pull the unit away from the wall and look for the voltage and amperage that is stamped on the plate. Using the equation Watts = Amps x Volts, the wattage of the fridge can be found.
If this is a home wiring question and the wires are black and white then black is Hot and white is Neutral. If you also have a red wire, it is the other hot wire, and either the black or the red wire to the white one would be 120 volts, and red to black would be 240 volts.
quite adequate
A single phase meter will have two "hot" wires, one black the other red. Each wire will carry 120 volts. Essentially these two wires together will provide you with 240 volts. Hire a professional when dealing with electricity.
Standard wiring for 220 volts which is also referred to as 240 volts, commonly has four wires. One is red, one is black, one is white and one is a bare copper wire. The red and black wire carry 120 volts each, the white wire in usually your neutral which hooks up to your ground along with the bare wire.
It is most likely that the appliance is 220-240 Volts. Check the rating plate. If so you need to connect to that type of service and to a breaker that will handle the load. The 220-240 Volts is connected between Red and Black, White is neutral and provides 110-120 Volts between it and Red or Black. The Green is the ground.