It is one amp current used over one hour. A ten amp hour battery can supply 1/2 an amp for 20 hours, 1 amp for 10 hours, etc.
The impedance is to low causing the amp to shut down
Yes, provided that your amp has line level inputs, and you have the appropriate adapters.
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 .
3Amp
why the out put is equal to the positive power supply of the op amp when the nonenverting aom input is greater then invertung input
The 50 amp charging circuit will never be able achieve a full charge for the 70 amp hour battery, thus in effect turning the 70 amp hour battery into a 50 amp hour battery.
The typical amp hour rating of a marine battery is usually between 50 to 200 amp hours.
Amp hour
Multiply by kilovolts, and you will have it. For example: 1 amp hour X 0.120 kilovolts = 0.120 kilowatt hours
If you draw one amp of power for 1 hour that is an amp hour . If you have a different load eg a heater drawing 3 amp , it would be 20 minutes . Divide the hour ( 60 mintues ) by the amps you draw .
The 12 amp hour battery will last longer under the same load as a 10 amp hour battery. For example if you had a load drawing 2 amps, the 12 Ahr battery would last 6 hours and the 10 Ahr would last 5 hours under ideal conditions.
4000 ma is equivalent to 4 amps 1 amp is 1/1000 ma/hour means amp or ma per hour.
yes
You can't convert amperes to ampere-hours, for the same reason that you can't (for example) convert kilometers to kilometers per hour, meters to square meters, etc. Those are, quite simply, incompatible units. An ampere is a unit of electrical current; an ampere-hour is really a unit of energy: the energy stored when a current of 1 ampere flows during one hour. To actually be an energy unit, a voltage must be assumed; this is usually 12 volt for a car battery.
In your car it will probably be OK except in extremely cold conditions or after 2-3 years use.
A typical deep cycle battery usually has amp-hour ratings ranging from 50 to 200 amp-hours.
It is 69 amp hours (based on a 20 hour discharge cycle, which is the standard for comparison).