To find your amps, divide your volt amps listed by the voltage you are using (and the device is rated for).Power in watts = Volts X AmpsVolts equals amps X resistance. All of these formulas can be transposed to find the missing element.If something is listed as 360 Volt amps and the voltage used is 120 volts it draws 3amps. So if the same device was used on a 240 volt circuit it would draw 1.5 amps. the power company charges for power (watts) so the volt amps are listed on the device and costs you the same regardless of the voltage used.If the same thing was designed for 12 volts it would draw 30 ampsThe current in amps is equal to the apparent power in volt-amps divided by the voltage in volts:A = VA / V
Amps is a measure of current flowing in a circuit. Volt-Amps or (VA) is a measure of power and is equivalent to wattage for a pure resistive load.
Power equals voltage times current in amps. The value of amps used is needed to do the math.
There is no such thing as fuses are rated in amps, not volts. a 10 amp fuse will protect against anything over 10 amps regardless of the voltage used.
70,000 Volt Amps
Multiply the vots by the amps to find the volt-amps. Or divide the volt-amps by the voltage to find the amps.
No you cannot house amps use 120 volt ac car amps use 12 volt dc
To find your amps, divide your volt amps listed by the voltage you are using (and the device is rated for).Power in watts = Volts X AmpsVolts equals amps X resistance. All of these formulas can be transposed to find the missing element.If something is listed as 360 Volt amps and the voltage used is 120 volts it draws 3amps. So if the same device was used on a 240 volt circuit it would draw 1.5 amps. the power company charges for power (watts) so the volt amps are listed on the device and costs you the same regardless of the voltage used.If the same thing was designed for 12 volts it would draw 30 ampsThe current in amps is equal to the apparent power in volt-amps divided by the voltage in volts:A = VA / V
A transformer's capacity is rated in volt amperes(V.A). This is the product of the secondary winding's current rating and voltage rating.
KVA is the abbreviation for kilo-volt-amp, or kilo-watt (volts x amps = watts) Your KVA is you amps used multiplied by 240 ( number of volts in the electrical service for your house) example: if your home draws 500 amps you are consuming you would be drawing 120,000 VA or 120 KVA. That help?
Amps is a measure of current flowing in a circuit. Volt-Amps or (VA) is a measure of power and is equivalent to wattage for a pure resistive load.
Power equals voltage times current in amps. The value of amps used is needed to do the math.
There is no such thing as fuses are rated in amps, not volts. a 10 amp fuse will protect against anything over 10 amps regardless of the voltage used.
Please re-phrase your question. A volt meter does not read volt amps.
Depends on the battery. It is listed on the battery as Cold Cranking Amps (CCA).
Add another leg of 120 to a three pole breaker.
1 watt = 1 amp * 1 volt So.... In a house: 5 amps * 115 volts = 575 watts In a car: 5 amps * 12 volts = 60 watts