A kiloampere is simply a thousand amperes, since kilo means thousand.
Kvar = Kilo Volt Amp Reactance.
kilo amp
A volt-amp or VA is equivalent to watts, provided the voltage and amperage are in phase. So 1 kilo volt amp is the same as 1 kilowatt. Wattage, or power, is equal to volts times amps. So the original question is effectively nonsense. The number of amps depends on the voltage. If the voltage is 1000 volts, then there's 1 amp in 1 kilo volt amp. If the voltage is 1 volt, then there's 1000 amps. If there's 50 volts, then the amperage is 20 amps. And so on.
Amp, Amperes is current. Volt, and any variation, is tension. There's no direct translation between them.
There is zero amps in one kilo volt amp. The terminology of KVA is (K) kilo meaning one thousand, (V) for volt and (A) for amperage. What is missing from the equation is a given voltage. Formula for finding the answer is I = (VA or W)/V .
2.083 amps
A cup of what? Kg = mass, cup = volume. You can derive the volume from the density and mass, or you can derive the density from the mass and the volume but without knowing the material the question is moot. You can't convert Kg to cups.
With one amp of current flowing there would be 5500 kilowatts of power. With other amounts of current, multiply by the current.
KVA is kilo volt amp, and one needs to know both the voltage and the amperage, and possibly the phase angle. It is comparable with kilowatts for a resistive load.
They are equal weight.
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?
it is obviously the same weight because it say KILO for both!