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What are the 5 voltages produced by and BTX power supply? +12v -12v +5v -5v +3.3v
Absolutely.As long as the converter (or any power source) is rated at the same voltage, with more current than the device needs.Sometimes, a device may have a higher initial current surge than it's operating current, keep this in mind. Some converters do a good job handling momentary surge, some don't.
It depends on how much power the lamps require, and on how they are connected.
A single 1.8 mega watt turbine, in one year, can produce 5.0 million kilowatts of electricity and supply enough power to generate for five hundred homes. 20 1.8 mega watt turbines, in one year can produce 2 billion kilowatts of electricity and supply enough power to generate 10,000 homes. 20 1.8 mega watt turbines, over twenty years, can produce 100 billion kilowatts of CLEAN electricity and supply enough power to generate 10,000 homes.
A three phase transformer is simply three transformers so, supplying one phase to a set of three transformers will result in only one phase output. Any loads connected to that transformer that are expecting three phase power will malfunction, and could fail.AnswerA three-phase transformer is NOT 'three separate single-phase transformers', as suggested in the original answer. It is a single transformer with three primary and secondary phase-windings wound around a common three-limb ('core') or five-limb ('shell') core. If a single-phase supply was applied to one of the three primary windings, then single phase voltages would appear across each of the three secondary windings and the remaining two primary windings. These voltages would not be out of phase with each other.
+3.3v +5v -5v +12v -12v
What are the 5 voltages produced by and BTX power supply? +12v -12v +5v -5v +3.3v
+12, -12, +5, -5, 3.3 and ground (or 0).
+12v,-12v, +5v, ,-5v, +3.3v and the one seldom used is -5v
ATX computer power supplies provide low volts DC of less than five volts. AT computer power supplies provide low DC only to five and twelve volts.
12V, 8V, 5V, 3.3V, and 2V.
+3.3V +5V +12V -12V +5VSB However it's really only three .
Absolutely.As long as the converter (or any power source) is rated at the same voltage, with more current than the device needs.Sometimes, a device may have a higher initial current surge than it's operating current, keep this in mind. Some converters do a good job handling momentary surge, some don't.
It depends on how much power the lamps require, and on how they are connected.
If you want a five-phase supply you need to start with a three-phase supply and a transformer that has 15 symmetrical cores. But why would one need a five-phase supply . . three is enough.
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The Power of Five was created in 2005.