This question cannot be answered without knowing the voltage.
Watts=Volts x Amps
In the United States mains voltage (what you get in your house) is 120 Volts, so 120 x 400 = 48,000 Watts
In Europe mains voltage is 230 Volts, so 230 x 400 = 92,000 Watts
Watts is the product of amps times volts. W = A x V.
Watts = Amps x Volts x Power Factor. Power Factor = 1 for resistive loads and gets smaller for inductive loads like motors. Assuming home voltage of 120 Volts and a PF = 1 your answer is 400/120 = 3.33 amps.
400 Volts X 45 Amps = 18,000 Watts
The conversion of watts to amps at a fixed voltage is governed by the equation Amps = Watts/Volts for example 12 watts/12 volts = 1 amp for a US example, a food mixer with a 400 watt motor on a 120 volt supply 400/120 = 3.33amps, fit a 5amp fuse
400
A motor will operate on 400 volts.
Watts = Amps x Volts x Power Factor. Power Factor = 1 for resistive loads and gets smaller for inductive loads like motors. Assuming home voltage of 120 Volts and a PF = 1 your answer is 400/120 = 3.33 amps.
400 Volts X 45 Amps = 18,000 Watts
The conversion of watts to amps at a fixed voltage is governed by the equation Amps = Watts/Volts for example 12 watts/12 volts = 1 amp for a US example, a food mixer with a 400 watt motor on a 120 volt supply 400/120 = 3.33amps, fit a 5amp fuse
24,000 PMPO
The Alpine v12 MRV-F505 amplifier puts out up to 200 watts of RMS power at 4 Ohms and using 12 volts. At 14 volts, it puts out up to 400 watts of RMS power with a bridged 4 Ohms ratio.
If the voltage is 500 volts, and the power is 200 kilo-watts, then the current is 400 amperes. (Watts equals Volts time Amperes)The resistance of the conductor has nothing to do with this calculation, but that fact that the conductors are 0.1 ohms means that the voltage drop across each conductor is 40 volts. (Volts equals Amperes times Ohms) Since there are two conductors, the total voltage drop is 80 volts, and the voltage available to the load will be 420 volts.
About 298,400 watts.
it has 400 watts
About 400 watts when cycled on
400
calculation for Watts is = volts X amps P=IE P= Power(WATTS) I = Current(AMPS) and E = Voltage(VOLTS). So: I = P/E and E = P/I therefore: 1 watt = 1 ampere x 1 volt If you havea 240 volt lamp that is drawing .5 amp then it is using 120 Watts
A digital clock doesn't have watts it consumes watts. The wattage consumed by the clock is in the neighborhood of W = A x V, W = 400 ma (.400) x 9 = 3.6 watts.