1,000,000V is not a measure of power. You need the amperage in the equation to figure out the power (wattage).
W = A x V
my butt!!
Less than 5 volts
Power = voltage times current, and the power loss is the loss in the line, I^2 * R. At 11,000 volts, the current will be (11,000 / 415 = ) 3.77% of what it is at 415 volts. So the power loss in the line at 11,000 volts will be (3.77% ^2 = ) .14% of what it is at 415 volts.
If a 48 Volt club car electric motor requires 48 volts, then it should be given a 48 volt power source, or something close to it. Too many more volts and it may burn out; not enough volts and it may not run or it will try to draw too much power and burn out the power supply.
240 watts at 120 volts requires 2 amperes. Power = voltage * current
1000000 volts
1000000 = 106
1000000=106
1000000 = 106
110 Volts (V)
uh, 4000 volts?
1000000 is Ten to the Power of Six
1000000 = 100*100*100 = 1003
my butt!!
1000000 * * * * * NO! That is 10 to the power of 6. 10 to the power of NEGATIVE 6 is 1 over 1000000 or 0.000001
Write a "1", and next to it write 1000000 zeros. That is the answer.
no probably not , you might have overloaded it with to much power