There has to be, that is why a switch was installed to stop it,but it must be hot before the switch or there would be no power to do what it was intended for.
If you are talking there is power after the switch at all times, the switch is bad and needs to be replaced.
The typical number of amps per circuit is 15 or 20. The typical number of volts that enter a home is 120/240 volts. The typical number of volts for each circuit is 120 volts. A GFCI (Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter) is a safety device that helps prevent electric shock by quickly disconnecting power when it detects a ground fault.
The power flowing through the circuit can be calculated using the formula P = I * V, where P is power, I is current, and V is voltage. In this case, P = 1 amp * 120 volts = 120 watts. Therefore, 120 watts of power flows through the circuit.
You want to know how many amps in that circuit. To do so, divide the Watts by the Volts. in your case it would be 60 watts / 120 volts = 0.5 Amps.
voltage is the PUSH on electrons seriously 120 volts is the difference of 240...Simply said 240 volts is 2 times as strong as 120 volts.
There can be no answer for this without knowing how strong a resistor is involved. (Ohms)
I = E/R = 120/25 = 4.8 amperes
This question makes no sense unless you mean volts instead of amps. And no, not for residential. Your panel feeds 120 volts or 240 volts depending on the way things are hooked up. You can wire circuit that is currently connected 120 as 240, however unless it is a dedicated circuit, YOU WILL BLOW UP YOUR APPLIANCES. Consult a qualified electrician.
That depends on the voltage, but the residential standard is 240 volt. At that voltage you sit at around 15 amps, however it MUST be on a 20 amp circuit for national (US) or Canadian electrical code, as you can only load your circuit to 80% of it's capacity.
Pwer is volts times amperes. 120 volts times 10 amperes = 1.2 KW
That depends on circuit voltage. 1 watt is equal to 1 volt times 1 amp.
"Milli" means "thousand", so there are one thousand millivolts on one volt. 120 volts times one thousand, equals 120,000 millivolts.
Wire in a turn signal flasher in series with the circuit you wish to flash. The flasher has two terminals. Just insert the flasher anywhere in the circuit. It will make/break the circuit to make the lights flash. This is considering that the circuit is 12 volts and not 120 volts.