1,000 miliamps equals to 1 Amp.
0.01 Amps
1 Amps = 1000 miliamps 0.01 Amps = X x= 0.01 X 1000 = 10 miliamps
There are 1,000 miliamps in 1 amp. As the NEC limits you to loading a lighting circuit to no more than 80% you can have 16 amps or 16,000 miliamps on that circuit. That would mean you can have 2,000 lamps of 8 miliamps each.
You also need to know the Voltage and wattage. Amps= Watts / Volts. Try this iPhone App "Watts2Amps"
1,000 miliamps equals to 1 Amp.
0.01 Amps
Anything over 50 miliamps is too much. Typically you would want to see something much lower than 50 (in the 15-30 miliamp range), but some cars are worse than others.
1 Amps = 1000 miliamps 0.01 Amps = X x= 0.01 X 1000 = 10 miliamps
There are 1,000 miliamps in 1 amp. As the NEC limits you to loading a lighting circuit to no more than 80% you can have 16 amps or 16,000 miliamps on that circuit. That would mean you can have 2,000 lamps of 8 miliamps each.
2.857 AMPS
A miliamp is one one thousandth of an ampere. So, the difference is that a miliamp is much smaller than an ampere.
Miliamps aren't like volts, it should not matter how many miliamps are provided, a piece of technology will only accept what it needs, so, the answer is yes it will work.
You also need to know the Voltage and wattage. Amps= Watts / Volts. Try this iPhone App "Watts2Amps"
you just did. you could change to amps -- 0.6 amp = 600 milliamps
A GFCI trips when it detects a difference in the amperage going to the outlet and what is coming back. Even 4-6 miliamps difference will trip the outlet.
34.539 miliamps is only 0.034539 amps. A 16 gauge wire will handle that.