It will be a 12 volt battery.
It can't. You home runs on 120 volts AC not DC power from a battery.
Volts * Amps = Watts 12 Volt * 2 amp = 24 Watts
A 15 KVA - Generator operating at 380 Volts can cater to only 22.79 Amps. It cannot cater to a 60 Amps breaker
Volts, amp hours an cold cranking amps.
The amp hours capacity of a battery remains the same whether it is connected to a 12-volt DC load or a 120-volt AC inverter. So, the battery would still have 100 amp hours regardless of the inverter voltage.
You would need a combination of batteries delivering nine volts at one amp.
two 12 volt batteries. positive to negative between the two batteries then hoock up your positive on amp to pos of one battery negative to the other battery and you will have 24 volts.
According to me the information about the 3 Volts DC batteries is incomplete i.e.The amp-hr capacity is not provided.If this is known then the answer would be 3X the amp-hr .
D5318 IS THE STYLE OF BATTERY. MAH STANDS FOR MILIE AMP HOURS AND IS THE RESERVE POWER OF THE BATTERY, THE HIGHER THE NUMBER THE LONGER THE BATTERY WILL GENERATE POWER. OF MAIN IMPORTANCE IS THE VOLTAGE IF THE OLD BATTERY IS 11.1 VOLTS, THE NEW MUST BE THE SAME, NOT HIGHER OR LOWER
That depends on the Amp-hour capacity of the battery and the power requirement of the TV when it's on. If the TV isn't designed to operate on 12 volts, then it won't run at all, no matter what the capacity of the battery is.
watts = volts x amps, example-2 watts=2 volts x 1 amp, example- 2 watts=120 volts x .60 amp.
No, 1 amp is 1000 milliamp your power supply will only deliver 600 milliamp or .6 of an amp.