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Watts = Amps x Volts. Amps = Watts/Volts. 10000/120 = 83.3 amps can be used at 120 volts. On a generator that large it is most likely that it also has the capacity to produce 240 volts. 10000/240 = 41.6 amps can be used at 240 volts. What you can connect to the generator will be totals of the amperage of devices that do not go above these amp ratings.
Small generators are sized in watts. Watts is the product of amps times volts. To properly answer this question a voltage for your 10 amps must be stated. That said small generator outputs are usually 120/240 volts in North America. So 10 amps at 120 volts equal 1200 watts. 10 amps at 240 volts equal 2400 watts. A 3000 watt generator will be amply for your 10 amp load.
500,000 watts/240 volts = 2,083.34 Amps (single phase)
Depends on how it was made at the factory. Some are 120 only some are 120/240. The model tag will have the voltage rating on it
At 240 volts, and 7 amp current, you will have a load of 1680 watts (volts x amps = watts). A 2000 watt generator will sufice, however a 3500 watt generator, if within your budget, will power a few other necessities if required.
Watts = Amps x Volts. Amps = Watts/Volts. 10000/120 = 83.3 amps can be used at 120 volts. On a generator that large it is most likely that it also has the capacity to produce 240 volts. 10000/240 = 41.6 amps can be used at 240 volts. What you can connect to the generator will be totals of the amperage of devices that do not go above these amp ratings.
This depends on what you are meaning by "Average". A typical small generator you can throw in the back of a truck will produce 120 volts, some can do 240. Building backup generators would produce whatever voltage is needed for that building (if it's a plant that using 480 volts, it will produce 480 volts). "Large" Wind turbine generators often produce 600-1000 volts; good sized power plants (100MW and up) will typically have a terminal voltage of 10-30kV.
If your generator is rated at 1000 watts continuous......and you are using 120V.....available amps are 1000/120 =8.3 .
Small generators are sized in watts. Watts is the product of amps times volts. To properly answer this question a voltage for your 10 amps must be stated. That said small generator outputs are usually 120/240 volts in North America. So 10 amps at 120 volts equal 1200 watts. 10 amps at 240 volts equal 2400 watts. A 3000 watt generator will be amply for your 10 amp load.
500,000 watts/240 volts = 2,083.34 Amps (single phase)
No, the generator must output 220 volts which any generator I have ever seen does.
When the term "double 20 amp circuit" is used, the presumption is that, it is 20 amps at 240 volts. If your generator has the breaker built in then, yes, you have the capacity to run 240 volt devices from your generator.
Depends on how it was made at the factory. Some are 120 only some are 120/240. The model tag will have the voltage rating on it
At 240 volts, and 7 amp current, you will have a load of 1680 watts (volts x amps = watts). A 2000 watt generator will sufice, however a 3500 watt generator, if within your budget, will power a few other necessities if required.
pass 240 volts through it
10 - 24 VDC truck batteries in series will give you 240 Volts DC.
Small single-phase generators are usually made to produce the same voltage as the house power supply in the area where it's being sold. In Europe that's 230 v, and in the USA 120 v or 240 v.