8,000 watts = 8 kVA / (the power factor)
If the power factor is 1, then 8 kVa = 8,000 watts.
It is a 8.00 KVA with power factor is unity (1).
For all intents and purposes 800 VA is equal to 800 watts. The formula for watts is W = A x V.
The term horsepower has several definitions, depending on usage. According to WikiPedia, the Electric Motor usage is 746 watts. One kva (kilo-volt-amp) is 1,000 watts, so you might be able to say that one kva is 746,000 watts. Unfortunately, kva depends on phase angle and, except for a power factor of one (purely resistive), kva is not the same as kw (kilo-watts). Someone else with more knowledge than I will need to enhance this answer.
One horsepower is equal to 746 watts.
Yes, you can use both, but watts is more useful; it provides the total amount of power the generator can output.
Va=volts x amps. The K stands for one thousand. So 1 Kva is one thousand watts. So 415v times 120a= 49,800 what's. You divide that by a thousand and you get 49.8. So it would be 49.8 Kva.
1kva means 1kv per ampere therefore 1 amp flowing and 1 kv deduce to be the product of the two or 1kw
20 kva a watts
0 - 1000. KVA times a power factor gives you kilowatts, 1000 x watts. If the power factor is 0, then o watts make up your one kVA; if the power factor is 1, then 1000 watts make up your one kVA. Typical power factor is in the range of .8 to 1.
1 KVA = 1,000 watts or in other terms, 1 Kilowatt.
1hp = 735.5 watts 16,000 kVA / 735.5 = 21.754 hp
There are ~5.9 kVA with 5600 watts and a power factor of 0.95. power factor is defined as the real power (watts) divided by the complex power (volt amperes): .95 = 5600/VA VA = 5600/.95 = 5894.7VA = 5.89kVA
It could be as much as 63 kW (63,000 Watts) into a load with a power factor of 1.0. For other loads, multiply the kVA by the power factor.
The term horsepower has several definitions, depending on usage. According to WikiPedia, the Electric Motor usage is 746 watts. One kva (kilo-volt-amp) is 1,000 watts, so you might be able to say that one kva is 746,000 watts. Unfortunately, kva depends on phase angle and, except for a power factor of one (purely resistive), kva is not the same as kw (kilo-watts). Someone else with more knowledge than I will need to enhance this answer.
If you multiply kVA by Power Factor (Ranges from zero to one) you get watts which is effective power.
To answer this question the voltage of the motor is needed.
Work and Time; Power = Work/Time
One horsepower is equal to 746 watts.
Formulas you need for single phase calculations. KVA = I x E/1000, KW = I x E x pf (where pf = power factor). For your question multiply the KVA by the power factor to get KW and then move the decimal point three places to the right to get watts. They are virtually the same. A watt is volts times amps. KVA is thousand of volts time amps. KVA and KW ratings are the same.