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A 15 amp switch can safely handle up to 1400 resistive watts.
Starter Switch - Part# 77282GS - $41.32+s&h
Yes, but the bulb will only operate at 60 watts and only in one of the switch positions. To shut the bulb off you will have to switch through the other two positions.
The switch will use no wattage whatsoever. The load on that switch is what uses power. If you know the load is 5 amps then 5 amps at 120 volts is 600 watts.
there is one Giga Giga watt in one Exa watt. So one Exa watt = one Giga Giga watt or 109 Giga watt or one Exa watt = 1018 watt and one Giga watt = 109 watt then one Exa watt = 109 Giga watt or one Exa watt = one billion Giga watt = one thousand million Giga watt
Thomas H. Marshall has written: 'James Watt 1736-1819'
He uses a Marshall DSL100 amplifier with two 300-Watt Marshall 1960A Angled-Front 4x12 Cabs and in these cabinets there are 75-Watt Celestion G12-T75 Speakers.
I use mine to power a 4X12 Ampeg 200 Watt
Lamps with five flexable lights that provide great lighting and come with shades and four way switches. The information below is telling you how brite the light will be if you used the same number watts in the lamp. Using 15 watt bulbs Using 30 watt bulbs Using 40 watt bulbs Using 60 watt bulb Switch 1: 30 watts Switch 1: 60 watts Switch 1: 80 watts Switch 1: 120 watts Switch 2: 45 watts Switch 2: 90 watts Switch 2: 120 watts Switch 2: 180 watts Switch 3: 75 watts Switch 3: 150 watts Switch 3: 200 watts Switch 3: 300 watts Switch 4: 0 watts Switch 4: 0 watts Switch 4: 0 watts Switch 4: 0 watts
Starter Switch - Part# 77282GS - $41.32+s&h
A 15 amp switch can safely handle up to 1400 resistive watts.
A dimmer switch is used for lighting loads and not heating loads. The wattage rating on a dimmer switch is what the manufacturer recommends as the maximum load that the switch can handle. For example if you have ten 100 watt lamps, the total load wattage would be 1000 watts (10 x 100). Too much load for a 600 watt rated dimmer switch but not for a 1000 Watt rated dimmer switch. So you can see that the rating on a dimmer switch governs the maximum wattage load that can be connected in the circuit that is to be controlled.
Yes, but the bulb will only operate at 60 watts and only in one of the switch positions. To shut the bulb off you will have to switch through the other two positions.
The switch will use no wattage whatsoever. The load on that switch is what uses power. If you know the load is 5 amps then 5 amps at 120 volts is 600 watts.
not unless the wire is exceptionally small, if if is 12 AWG or even 14 AWG you will be ok unless you are using it for a transmission line (unlikely) The smallest wire you can use safely is a 21 AWG wire but that's not a wire used in the walls
100 watts should be good for small to medium rooms. Of course, it also depends on how "hot" your guitar pickups are.
crutchfield has a wiring diagram for all kinds of configurations, check it out.