Maximum 23,000 watts provided the power factor of the load is 1 (e.g. a heater). For a typical motor with a power factor of 0.8 the watts would be 18,400.
When you multiply amps x volts the product is watts. Using this formula W = Amps x Volts should give you your answer.
A three wire home distribution service rated at 100 amps has a wattage capacity of;From L1 to L2 at 240 volts x 100 amps = 24000 watts or 24 kilowatts. From L1 to neutral at 120 volts x 100 amps = 12000 watts or 12 kilowatts. From L2 to neutral at 120 volts x 100 amps = 12000 watts or 12 kilowatts.
Watts = Amps * Volts Watts = 20 amps * 100 Volts Watts = 2000 2,000 Watts or 2k Watts
Watts = Amps * Volts Watts = 20 amps * 100 Volts Watts = 2000 2,000 Watts or 2k Watts
The formula for watts is, Watts = Amps x Volts.
If the 12V source can deliver 100 Ampere, then yes. If it can't, then no. (remember watts / volts = amps)
I may be wrong, but I think you can calculate it by: Watts = Volts x Amps So: Amps = Watts / Volts Thus, if you're running them on a 240 volt circuit, it resolves to: A = 200 / 240 = 0.83 Amps
The wattage would be 500 watts. This is calculated by multiplying the amperage (5 amps) by the voltage (100 volts), resulting in 500 watts of power.
The formula you are looking for is I = W/E. Amps = Watts/Volts.
Generators are sized by the electrical load that is to be applied to it. If you want to pick up the total house load then a 25 to 30 kW generator will do the job. At 240 volts this will give you just over 100 amps to work with. Amps = Watts/Volts.
This will still only produce 12 volts. It will produce 1200 watts. watts is the result of Volts times Amps.
Watts are amps x volts, so w/o the volts the question can't be answered. At 100 volts it'd be 15 amps.