88 amps
200 and 100
It depends upon the Generator system voltage. For 3 Phase, 600 Volt system, it will be 73 Amps For 3 Phase, 480 Volt system, it will be 90 Amps For 3 Phase, 208 Volt system, it will be 208 Amps
Up to about 100 ft the size of the wire is determined by the max current and not the distance. A 90 amp supply needs #6 wire. <<>> A #2 copper conductor will limit the voltage drop to 3 percent or less when supplying 90 amps for 75 feet on a three phase 480 volt system.
Probably 2-3 HP. <<>> The electrical code book states for estimating values only that a 1.5 HP motor operating on three phase 208 volts draws 6.6 amps. For calculating overload protection and conductor size, the motors nameplate rating should always be used.
Typically 75 amps on natural gas, 85 amps using propane. Peak amps(for less than a second) to start a big appliance, like an A/C condenser, are 130.
75 Amps theoretically Need to know if the generator is 3 phase or single phase.
For single phase, KVA = (line to ground) * (phase current). A 75kVA 480 to 208Y/120 volt transformer is a fairly common transformer. I assume this is the type of transformer you are referring to. 75k / 120 = 625 Amps. As an FYI, the 208Y voltage is the line to line voltage, which is equal to (phase 1) - (phase 2), where the phases are separated by 120 degrees, thus (phase 1) * 1.732 For three phase, kVA = (line to line voltage) * (phase current) *(sqrt 3), 75k / 208 / 1.732 = 208 Amps.
75% of 480= 75% * 480= 0.75 * 480= 360
The answer is that it depends upon the a. efficiency (to determine its input power). b. supply voltage. c. nature of the supply (single-phase, three-phase, d.c., etc.)
A 120 volt table lamp with a 75 watt bulb will pull 0.625 amps. With a 100 watt bulb it will pull 0.833 amps. And with a modern fluorescent 13 watt bulb it will pull 0.108 amps.
There are 0.075 amps in 75 milliamps.
The formula you are looking for is , A = kva x 1000/Volts.