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The relation is:P = I2RWhere:I is the current (for example, in amperes)R is the resistance (for example, in ohms)P is the power (energy per second) converted from electrical energy to heat. If the current is in amperes and the resistance in ohms, then power is in watts (equal to joules/second).
The formula is Resistance= Voltage/ Amps(current) In your example: R=50/2.5, so the answer is 20 ohms.
5 ohms.
ohms laws
electrical resistance
A: CONTINUITY check is not used to ascertain ohms value but rather the connections
It depends on the resistance of each resistor. If each resistor, for example, is 0.333 ohm, then you could connect them in series. If each resistor, for example, is 3 ohms, then you could connect them in parallel.
That depends how they are connected. For example, if they are connected in series, just add the individual resistances.
amp*volts=watts
Very basically, simply divide the voltage by the amperage. Thsi is not for calculating Ohms of resistance, just Ohms. For example, a 9 volt battery that delivers 3 amps has 3 ohms. To calculate ohms of resistance we use the ohms law. This measures the difference in current flow in amps (amps/current is amount or volume of flow, volts is power pushing that current, sort of) and voltage. For instance, measure the amps and voltage at the source and record the ohms. Then record the same at the end point the difference in ohms is ohms of resistance. So, if we measure 10 volts and 2 amps at the source we have 5 ohms. at the end point we have 8 volts and 1 amp we have 8 ohms. therefore we have 13 ohms of resistance. 1 Determine current. Current is the flow of electricity measured in amps. For example a current has four amps in the circuit. 2 Determine voltage. Voltage is the difference in electrical potential from two points, measured in volts. For example, there is two-hundred volts in a circuit. 3 Divide voltage by current to calculate resistance. Resistance is measured in ohms. In the example, two-hundred volts divided by four amps equals fifty ohms. 4 To get ohms of resistance, measure the end point. at the endpoint we have 100 volts and 2 amps=50 ohms. therefore we have 100 ohms of resistance
I presume you mean wired to four ohms amplifier output: In this case, pair the two speakers in in series which will make the give you 18 Ohms and then join the two pairs in parallel which will result in approximately eight ohms. Then connect then in that format to the amplifier. It will work for you.
Google Ohms Law. It will give you all the formulas you need to compute Ohms,Volts and Amps. Simple formulas :-)
The difference in between Ohms and Ohms CT is that in Ohms CT it has CT at the end.
mark your leads a b c read ohms from a-b a-c b-c example a-b=2ohms a-c = 3 ohms b-c =5 ohms . a is com--b is run c- is start com to run low ohms com to start middle ohms start to run high ohms
3000 ohms are 3 kiloohms.
Ohms are smaller than k-ohms, so number of ohms must be a bigger number. Multiply k-ohms by 1,000 to get the same resistance in ohms.
135 ohms new, and will function properly down to 114 ohms. The chart in the '86-'87 book shows: Empty=110 ohms +/- 7 ohms Full=3 ohms +/- 2 ohms 1/2 full= 32.5 ohms +/- 4 ohms