An ordinary AAA, AA, C, or D sized battery cell will provide 1.5 volts when fully charged. Take it from there!
kilo means 1000 so multiply by 1000 to get from 1 volt to 1 kilo volt
Volt is the unit of voltage.One volt is equal to 1 joule per coulomb:1 V = 1 J/C
Volt is the unit of voltage.One volt is equal to 1 joule per coulomb:1 V = 1 J/C
1 volt battery does not exist.
orange having 3.3 volt yellow having +12 volt red having +5 volt blue having -12 volt black having ground Violet and gray having 5 volt green is for power switch
No. The capacitor will short out and possibly explode. On the other hand, the 440 Volt Cap can be used in a 220 Volt circuit.
A 1-amp adaptor can not be used for equipment that draws more than 1 amp. It is not clear from the question which part of your system is 12 v and which is 20 v.
The volt.
Yes, but by using 120 volts on the 208 volt element you will only be able to obtain 1/4 of the rated wattage from the element not 1/2 like it seems you should.
if it is any think over 1 volt it is not a cell battery it is just a 6 volt battery if you had a 1 volt then it would be a cell battery
1 volt
1 watt = 1 volt-ampere = 1 volt-coulomb per second = 1 joule per secondSo from this I learn out the fact that 1 volt-coulomb = 1 joule. This feels like somethingthat I probably used to know but forgot many years ago. Be that as it may, I'll use it.1 joule = 1 volt-coulomb90 joules = 90 volt-coulombs90 joules = 22.5 volts x (90/22.5 coulombs)90/22.5 = 4 coulombs