It depends on the current being drawn by the computer's components. The voltage will remain constant at 230V and should have a maximum amperage rating labeled on the power supply. Multiply the volts times the max amp rating to find out the max wattage that the power supply can handle. The watts actually being used is probably lower than the rated max (and should be).
1 horsepower = 746 watts 2 hp = 1,492 watts Voltage x current = power 230 x current = 1,492 Current = 1,492/230 = 6.487 Amperes (rounded)
You are working with two different values. Watts is the product of amps times volts. W = A x V, as you can see if there is a value missing then there can be no answer given.
The maximum wattage that a 30 amp breaker can handle is 30 x 230 = 6900 watts. Other variables come into play and this number will decrease depending on the load, duty time, and difference in voltage fluctuation.
The 440 volts listed on the cap is the maximum allowable voltage the capacitor can handle. You could actually use a 370 volt cap on 230 volts. ANSWER; 230 volts AC can it actually be 644 volts peak to peak . It is 44ov because it must be rectified and sees only 324 volt peak which is withing the 440 volt capacitor handling voltage
The only way to do that is with a transformer. They make inline transformers that convert 230 to 115 and they simply plug in inline.
Watts = Amps X Volts Grab your calculator!
Watts = Volts x Amps x Power Factor Maximum Power Factor is 1 for resistive load.
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 = Amps x Volts Amps = Watts / Volts you only need to know two of the three to work out the other so 230 volts at 10 amps gives 2300 Watts (2.3 kW) 2.3kW at 230 volts draws 10 Amps
There are no watts to generate volts!! There is a relation that is watts = volts * Amps Generators are set up to generate a specific voltage regardless or watts or amps capacity it has.
In normal simple circuits WATTS = VOLTS x AMPS So if you use a 12V car battery 4 amps is 48 Watts American 110V mains 4 amps = 440 Watts English 240V mains 4 amps = 960 Watts
Look at the back of your fridge and find the plate that tells you how many amps it needs. Once you have Amps you multiply that number by the Volts coming out of your plug (usually 120v) and you will get Watts. So once more: Amps x Volts = Watts
1 horsepower = 746 watts 2 hp = 1,492 watts Voltage x current = power 230 x current = 1,492 Current = 1,492/230 = 6.487 Amperes (rounded)
50 watts for a small one, 200 watts for a big one. The voltage is 230 v in Europe, 120 v in USA.
230 Volts
You are working with two different values. Watts is the product of amps times volts. W = A x V, as you can see if there is a value missing then there can be no answer given.
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