Ur talking about the movie rating, right? It stands for 15 accompaunt (sorry for spelling) if your under 15, you must be with an adult. Sorry if your talking about something else.
The difference in between Ohms and Ohms CT is that in Ohms CT it has CT at the end.
I can't do all the math for that but if it helps that's a 1,077.3 watt heat discharge.
ohms law.
In series like so ---6 ohms ---- 12 ohms --- , the total resistance is just 6 ohms + 12 ohms.assuming you mean in parallel like this:_|---6 ohms-----|-|~|-_|---12 ohms---|then the resistance of this can be calculated like so:1/6 ohms + 1/12 ohms = 1/R (where R is the resistance of the circuit as a whole)2/12 ohms + 1/12 ohms = 1/R3/12 ohms = 1/R1/4 ohms = 1/Rso R = 4 ohmsA few notes, if the resistors are in parallel the total resistance will always be less than or equal to the lowest resistance in parallel (i.e 6 ohms in parallel with 12 ohms will have resistance less than 6 ohms).Also if two resistances in parallel are the same, then the resistance is half of the resistance of both resistors (i.e. 1/2 ohms + 1/2 ohms = 1/R; 1 = 1/R, R=1 ohm which is half of 2 ohms).This process can be extended to 2 or more resistors in parallel.i.e if we had a 6 ohm, 6 ohm and 12 ohm resistor in parallel we could go1/6 ohms + 1/6 ohms + 1/12 ohms = 1/R(1/6 ohms + 1/6 ohms) + 1/12 ohms = 1/R1/3 ohms + 1/12 ohms = 1/R4/12ohms + 1/12 ohms = 1/R5/12 ohms = 1/Rso R = 12/5 ohms or 2.4 ohms
yes.
15a + 12 = 3(5a + 4)
No
It is already in its simplest form, so it is: 15a + 25
If you mean: 15a = 6a - 90 then the variable a works out as -10. If you mean 15a + 6a - 90, then it equals 21a - 90.
5
The difference in between Ohms and Ohms CT is that in Ohms CT it has CT at the end.
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
A Megohm is one million ohms. To convert ohms to Megohms, divide by one million.
I can't do all the math for that but if it helps that's a 1,077.3 watt heat discharge.
1,3,5,15,a