KV is kiloVolt and KWH is KiloWatt Hour
The higher-voltage line will have longer insulators and the line conductors will be further apart. And the symbol for kilovolt is 'kV', not 'kv'.
There is no difference in the meaning of kWh or KWH. Both forms of writing kWh mean "kilo watt hours," and the format acceptable to most in the technical community is "kWh."AnswerThe correct symbol for kilowatt hour is kW.h.
The lower-case 'k' in 'kV' (not 'kv') is a multiplier, representing 'kilo', meaning 'a thousand times', and the upper-case 'V' represents 'volts', the SI unit for potential difference. So a '220-kV' cable has a line voltage (voltage between conductors) of 220 kV.
There is no city KV. KV stands for Kilo Volts
basically there will not be any difference between them. the capacity of equipment will be more such as the CB rating will be more basically there will not be any difference between them. the capacity of equipment will be more such as the CB rating will be more
Ground clearance132 kv - 6100 mm220 kv - 7015mm400 kv - 8840mm765 kv - 15000mm
KV, kilovolts, or kilojoules per coulomb is not the same thing as KVA, kilovoltamperes, or kilojoules per second, and no direct comparison exists. Please restate the question.
Star (or 'wye') connected alternators have a phase voltage of 6.35 kV, and a line voltage of 11 kV. Incidentally, it's 'kV', not 'KV'.
It isn't. In the UK, transmission and distribution voltages are 400 kV, 275 kV, 132 kV, 66 kV, 33kV, and 11 kV.
"KV" is the abbreviation of "Köchel-Verzeichnis" and more common in Europe whereas "K" is more used in Anglo-Saxon countries.
KV Malleshwaram, Bangalore
KWH