This would depend on the voltage. There is a formula you use to figure wattage which is amps X volts = watts. Since a milliamp is 1/1,000th of an amp, then if the voltage is, say the standard 120 volts AC then 120 X 1/1,000th = .12 (12 one hundredths of a watt) watts. If the voltage was the standard 12 volts DC then it would be 12 X 1/1,000th (or 0.001)= 1.2 watts
1 milli ampere is 0.001 amperes.
1/1000
It depends of the voltage applied. You'll find the answer using the formula P=V.I, where P is the power in watts, V is the voltage in volts and I is the current in amp (in the case, equal to 1 amp)
There are 1000 microamps in one milliamp. Each derived SI unit in each direction is three decimal places as in all engineering form.
To answer this question a voltage is needed. 1 HP = 746 Watts. Amps = Watts/Volts.
As 1 Watt equals to 1000 milli Watts so 25 milliwatts = 25/1000 = 0.025 Watts.
Milli amp or Milli-ampere is a measurement of current. The base unit is Ampere or amp and the Milli amp is 1/1000th of an amp.CommentThe correct spelling is milliampere -no hyphen!
It depends of the voltage applied. You'll find the answer using the formula P=V.I, where P is the power in watts, V is the voltage in volts and I is the current in amp (in the case, equal to 1 amp)
1milliwatt= 0.001 watts1000*0.001= 1 watt
There are 1000 microamps in one milliamp. Each derived SI unit in each direction is three decimal places as in all engineering form.
"milli" means a thousandth in the metric units of measurement. Thus 1000 milliamps = 1 amp.
watts = volts x amps, example-2 watts=2 volts x 1 amp, example- 2 watts=120 volts x .60 amp.
To answer this question a voltage is needed. 1 HP = 746 Watts. Amps = Watts/Volts.
Watts divided by voltage. Standard crockpot use 1-2 amp.
As 1 Watt equals to 1000 milli Watts so 25 milliwatts = 25/1000 = 0.025 Watts.
Milli amp or Milli-ampere is a measurement of current. The base unit is Ampere or amp and the Milli amp is 1/1000th of an amp.CommentThe correct spelling is milliampere -no hyphen!
For a resistive load Watts = Volta * Amps. Therefore, you have 1/4 amp or 250 Milliamps (250ma)
Voltage times current is equivalent to power (watts). You need to keep in mind that milli amp hours (mAh) is amps with a unit of time - it's a specific amount of current for 1 hour. Watts is an instananeous measurement; watt hours is the equivalent you should be looking for. there is no direct conversion for watts from voltage and mAh.
Ohms does not equal watts. You need to know what voltage is across the resistor to determine how many watts it is drawing or how many watts the resistor should be rated for.Power is the voltage across the resistor SQUARED divided by the resistance. If this 4 ohm resistor has 12 volts across it then the watts power is (12 x 12) / 4 = 36 watts.1 Watt equals 1 Volt times 1 Amp.