These are not convertible quantities. The same way that you cannot convert seconds into pounds. Or pounds into miles per hour. If you reconstituted your question into the form of "I have a device that draws 2 amps at 125 volts, how many Watts is it consuming?" we'd be off to the races. Hope that helps.
Watts = volts x Amps x PowerFactor. For a resistive load with a power factor of one there would be 1250 watts or 1.25 KW.
That's 375 Watt's (Just multiply the volts x amps)
1000 milliamperes = 1 amp. Assuming a resistive load, amps = watts / volts = .125 amps or 125 milliamperes
There is no direct relationship between watts and volts. Watts = volts x current in amps.
Watts = Volts * Amps Therefore: 70 Watts / 13.8 Volts = 5.07 Amps
Watts is volts times amps, so 12 x 30 = 360 watts
You need the formula: Amps * Volts = Watts But you get to do the math.
1000 milliamperes = 1 amp. Assuming a resistive load, amps = watts / volts = .125 amps or 125 milliamperes
volts times amps = watts
There is no direct relationship between watts and volts. Watts = volts x current in amps.
Watts and Volts are two distinct types of measurement.
Watts = Volts * Amps Therefore: 70 Watts / 13.8 Volts = 5.07 Amps
Amps, volts and watts are interrelated, but you need to do a little math. Amps * Volts = Watts
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
4 volts and how many amps? Watts = amps x volts. It depends on the amount of current (in Amps) flowing at 4 Volts... See Ohms Law: Watts = Volts x Amps If you have 2 Amps flowing at 4 Volts you are dissipating/consuming 8 Watts. If you have 10 Amps flowing at 4 Volts you are dissipating/consuming 40 Watts.
Volts don't make power. Watts do. Watts = (volts) x (amps) 1 horsepower = 746 watts
watts = volts x amps, example-2 watts=2 volts x 1 amp, example- 2 watts=120 volts x .60 amp.
You need the formula: Amps * Volts = Watts But you get to do the math.
Watts is volts times amps, so 12 x 30 = 360 watts