power equals current times voltage 50w=(I)110v so 50w\110v = I .454 amps
Amperage (coulombs/sec sort of like volume) and wattage (power) are independent of each other if you know the voltage you can calculate amps but they are not the same thing. 3000 watts/X volts=amps ex. 3000 watts/110v=27.28 amps
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
There is no translation between volts and watts, they measure different things. Power (in watts) equals potential difference (in volts) times current (in amps) P=IV=(I^2)R=(V^2)/R
Watts is what you get by multiplying Amps times Voltage, so unless you know Voltage there's no way of telling. For 100 Volts you'd get 250 Watts at 1 amp, for 50 Volts you get it at 5 Amps, and so on.
power equals current times voltage 50w=(I)110v so 50w\110v = I .454 amps
110v x 3.2 a=352 watts time 5= 17600.00 watts or 353 watts per hour
If running at 110V, that is 10Amps. Wattage = Voltage x Current Current = Wattage / Voltage - Neeraj Sharma
Yes but you will not get the full watt rating out of the tank. Watts = amps x volts. Say the tank draws 20 amps. 20A x 240V = 4800 watts. 20A x 208V = 4160 watts. It will take longer to heat your water with less wattage.
You need a dedicated circuit for that. You cannot power a 220V device off 110V.
wattage is voltage and amperage multiplied. example V/A=W or 120v x 20a=2400 watts
Amperage (coulombs/sec sort of like volume) and wattage (power) are independent of each other if you know the voltage you can calculate amps but they are not the same thing. 3000 watts/X volts=amps ex. 3000 watts/110v=27.28 amps
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
There is no translation between volts and watts, they measure different things. Power (in watts) equals potential difference (in volts) times current (in amps) P=IV=(I^2)R=(V^2)/R
Watts is what you get by multiplying Amps times Voltage, so unless you know Voltage there's no way of telling. For 100 Volts you'd get 250 Watts at 1 amp, for 50 Volts you get it at 5 Amps, and so on.
The formulae for calculating watts to amps is Watts divided by Voltage. Therefore to get from Amps to Watts the calculation is Amps × Voltage. Therefore if you are working on a 240 volt supply the calculation is 20 (Amps) × 240 (Volts) which = 4800 watts.
A watt is a unit of power, and power is given by P = IV where P is power, I is current and V is voltage. Therefore, P = IV = (7.8A)*(110V) = 858A*V = 858W