Volts are the measure of electrical force or pressure that causes current to flow in a circuit. This is related directly to electricity. Voltage is also measured in volts.
Watts are the product of amps times volts.
Low voltage by definition means any voltage from 31 to 750 volts inclusive.
Low voltage electricity typically refers to voltages below 1000 volts. It is commonly used in residential, commercial, and industrial applications to power lighting, appliances, and other electrical devices.
1 volt = 1 joule per coulomb 3 joules x 1 coulomb = 3 volts
volts abbr (V)
900,000 Volts. That is Nine Hundred Thousand volts.
150 volts is 125% of 120 volts.
The conversion factor from electron volts to volts is 1 eV 1.602 x 10-19 volts.
Watts are the product of amp x volts. 200 x 110 = 22000. The above is correct for a pure resistive load. With an inductive load the formula is Watts = Volts x Current x PF Where PF = Power factor which is between 0 and 1. For definition of Power Factor, search wikipedia.com
5000 volts
45 volts
12 volts