100 amps to a 3 phase load. Power = 100A x Voltage x 1.73 ((line to line voltage)(1.73=SQRT(3)).
173 amps to each of 3 single phase (line to line) loads. Power = 173A x Voltage (line to line voltage).
or... 100 amps to each of 3 single phase (line to neutral) load. Power = 300A x Voltage (line to neutral voltage).
Example:
- 3 phase, 480v, 100amp to a 3 phase heater. 100A x 480V x 1.73 = 83040 watts.
- 3 single phase 480v (L-L voltage) heaters, 100amp. 173A x 480V = 83040 watts.
- 3 single phase 277v (L-N voltage) heaters, 100amp. 300A x 277V = 83100 watts.
62.5 amps
a 1.5 kVa source of electrical power has the capacity to supply 100 volts at 15 amps, 300 volts at 5 amps, or 1000 volts at 1.5 amps.
for 1 hp we cnt say the amps why because hp will mention the speed in never will differ but comparatively amps (load) will differ dip pends upon the voltage (380,220,440)W = V * I / I = W / V
USB 3.1 (C) can deliver a power output of up to 100 watts (20 volts and 5 amps).
It depends on what the voltage is: A Watt is a unit of power described as "1 ampere of current pushed by 1 volt of Electro-motive force", therefore 1W = 1A x 1V. 1 kW is a "kilowatt" or 1000 Watts. Using the above formula, and a little algebra, you can find the current required to deliver any amount of power depending on the applied voltage: Current = Power / Voltage; symbolically expressed as I = P / V examples: * 9.5kW x (1000W/kW) / 120v = 79.2 amps * 9.5kW x (1000W/kW) / 240v = 39.6 amps * 9.5kW x (1000W/kW) / 480v = 19.8 amps (Notice how raising the voltage reduces the required current?)
75 Amps theoretically Need to know if the generator is 3 phase or single phase.
The answer is that it depends upon the a. efficiency (to determine its input power). b. supply voltage. c. nature of the supply (single-phase, three-phase, d.c., etc.)
You don't need three-phase power; tanning beds run on single-phase. You've got enough amps.
62.5 amps
A rough guide is to divide kVA by the supply voltage then multiply by 1000 to get current in Amps. E.g. 20kVA divided by 120V is 0.167; times 1000 is 167 Amps. But kVA is not the same as kW, so more information is needed before equipment is used.
you will need to be allot more specific on what you are trying to do here. what is the difference in amps. what is the device Generally speaking it is good practice to only use the power supply that the device is rated for. the biggest issue you will have is this Power = voltage * current (simple version) if the power supply you had was 12v at 1 amps then you ca supply 12Watts of power if the power supply you had was 12v at 10 amps then you can supply 120Watts of power Just because you can supply 10 amps, and all you need is one, means your power supply is bigger than it needs to be. The device will draw what it is intended to draw. Just make sure the voltage matches.
This depends on what voltage the range is rated for and if it is single phase or three phase. At 220 volts single phase it is about 60 amps, 240 v single phase , 53 amps and at 480 v three phase about 15 amps.
A 24 volt DC power supply provides DC amps, not AC amps. You cannot draw 1.8 amps AC from a DC power supply, without some kind of inverter stage.That is the answer to the specific wording of the question. Now the answer to the question I think was originally intended...If 1.8 amps AC is being supplied to a 24 volt DC power supply, what would the current supplied by the power supply be?Power is volts times amps, so power supplied to the power supply is 120 VAC (assumed) times 1.8 amps, or 216 watts. If the power supply is 100% efficient, then the power input equals the power output, so use the some equation to take 216 watts and divide by 24 volts, and you get 9 amps.Keep in mind, this is ideal state, assuming 100% efficiency, and no real power supply will be that.
For a 1hp 3-phase motor, the current draw will depend on the voltage supply. Typically, at 230V, a 1hp 3-phase motor will draw around 3.6 amps. However, this value may vary based on the motor efficiency and power factor.
To determine the running amps of a 45 kW motor, you would need to know the voltage at which it operates. You can use the formula: Amps = (kW x 1000) / (Volts x power factor). Once you have the voltage and power factor information, you can plug them into the formula to calculate the running amps.
No you can not. The power supply output of 1.2 amps is under sized. You would need to have a power supply of 3 amps or larger.
In a three phase 225 amp panel, there would be a total of 225 amps available for each phase, making it a total of 675 amps for all three phases combined. This means that you could have up to 225 amps of current flowing through each phase simultaneously.