If you have the right test equipment amps are the easiest to measure. A slip over the wire amp meter is easier to use than a clamp on amp meter. The other two values have to be measured by using test leads from the test equipment.
At 120 volts it will pull 4.166 amps. At 240 volts it will pull 2.08 amps.
A 1450 watt coffee maker will use around 13 amps at 110 volts.
If your generator is rated at 1000 watts continuous......and you are using 120V.....available amps are 1000/120 =8.3 .
volts times amps equals watts, a measure of power. Amps times hours equals amp-hours, a measure of electric charge. Electric charge times voltage is energy. So 120 volts at 10 amps for 4 hours would pass 40 amp-hours of charge, the power would be 1200 watts and the energy would be 4800 watt-hours or 4.8 kilowatt-hours. So volts times amp-hours equals energy in watt-hours.
36.6 amps maximum at 120 volts, but should not be loaded to over 29 amps. At 240 volts it will produce a maximum of 18.3 amps but never loaded to any more than 14.6 amps.
Watt volts is not an electrical term. Watts are the product of amps times volts.
The watt is the unit of power. For electricity, watts = volts x amps.
It depends on how many Amps (current) are applied to the voltage. Watt = Volts x Amps. e.g. 12 volts @ 5 amps = 60 watts
Amps times volts = watts Watts measures the rate of power usage. watts times hours = watt hours Watt hours is a measure of the amount of power used.
A multimeter measures current in amperes and potential difference in volts. Wattmeters are used to measure watts and the reading is a combination of current being drawn and the voltage applied. watt = volts x amps
The watt is the unit of power. For electricity, watts = volts x amps.
At 120 volts it will pull 4.166 amps. At 240 volts it will pull 2.08 amps.
Milli amps is a measure of current whilst watt is a measure of power. The missing element is voltage as the formula is:- Power = Voltage * Amps ie power in Watts is the product of Volts (in Volts) times Amps (in Amps)
The formula you are looking for is I = W/E. Amps = Watts/Volts.
The relationship is, a watt is the product of amps x volts.
The watt is the unit of power. For electricity, watts = volts x amps.
Watts and amps measure different things, and they cannot be converted as asked. Watts measures power. Volts measures voltage and amps is a measure of current. The three electrical parameters are related by this formula: Power (watts) = volts times amps. If you know the voltage, then you can find the watt-to-amp ratio.