The wattage of an air conditioning unit depends on the current (in amps), as well as the voltage. So various sizes of air conditioners will use different amounts of power (in watts).
The unit of power is expressed in watts, and the product of current (Amps) and voltage (volts) is power there fore if you multiply the amps and the volts give watts. so 20 x 240 will give you a 4800 watts of power.
Amps is an electric current unit and watt is an electric power unit.
American use both watts and volts to measure units of electricity.
9000 BTU/hour is equivalent to 2300 watts so the heater will draw 10 amps on 230 volts.
There are zero amps in a watt. I = W/E. W = A x V. It depends on how many volts there are. Since watts is amps times volts, amps is watts divided by volts. If you had a 120V circuit with 1 watt, there would be 1/120, or 0.00833 amps flowing in that circuit Note: This is the resistive answer, with a power factor of 1. For reactive loads, things change, but the basic question is answered.
Watts = Volts x Amps x Power factor For an AC Unit I am guessing that your PF = .75 so we have 115 x 9.2 x .75 = 793.5 Watts.
volts is the unit of votage while watts is the unit of power
Watts are a unit of power and Volts are a unit of electric potential, so they cannot be directly compared. However, Watts and Volts can be related byWatts = Volts * AmperesorWatts = (Volts^2) / Ohmswhere Amperes are a unit of current and Ohms are a unit of resistance. So, for example, if a lightbulb draws .333 Amps of current at 120 Volts, it is a 40 Watt bulb. (.333 A * 120 V = 40 W)
Watts are the unit for electrical power and volts are the unit for electrical voltage.
The unit of power is expressed in watts, and the product of current (Amps) and voltage (volts) is power there fore if you multiply the amps and the volts give watts. so 20 x 240 will give you a 4800 watts of power.
Amps is an electric current unit and watt is an electric power unit.
American use both watts and volts to measure units of electricity.
Power=Volts x Amps Unit for power is watts
Electricity board read the billings in units.therefore 1 unit is equal to how many watts?
Wattage is unit of power which is the product of Voltage in V and Current in Amps. If you know the current drawn by the appliance with 1200 Watts then you can calculate the Voltage = Power/ Current. For eg. if the current drawn by the appliance is 100A then the voltage is 1200/100 i.e. 12 Volts.
A) amperes B) volts C) watts D) ohms
9000 BTU/hour is equivalent to 2300 watts so the heater will draw 10 amps on 230 volts.