They're are not related. Watts are measurement of power while Ohms are measurement of resistance. One watt equals one volt times one amp.
It depends on the load's resistance (ohms). By using the formula P (watts) = V^2 (volts) / R (ohms), and assuming a load resistance of 1 ohm, the voltage would be 1 volt for 1 watt.
voltage! measured in volts. current X resistance = voltage simple ohms law
To calculate the resistance of a 5 watt light bulb, you can use the formula P = V^2 / R, where P is power (5 watts) and V is voltage (typically around 120V for a household light bulb). Rearranging the formula to solve for resistance, you get R = V^2 / P. Plugging in the values, R = (120V)^2 / 5W = 2880 ohms. So, a 5 watt light bulb at 120V would have a resistance of 2880 ohms.
Watts = Volts / Ohms Watts = Volts x Amps
Two, two, two. Or 22 times 102 ohms, or 2200 ohms, or 2.2K ohms, or just 2.2K, as in, "I've got a 2.2K resistor that needs replacing. It's a quarter watt."
To calculate the ohm reading of a 4500-watt baseboard heater, you would need to know the voltage it operates at. You can use the formula Ohms = (Voltage x Voltage) / Watts to find the resistance in ohms. For example, if the heater operates at 240 volts, the ohm reading would be approximately 12.8 ohms.
1000 ohms.
voltage is measured in ohms which is represented by the omega sign.
That is 366,300 ohms.
3500 Ohms
Take a good 100 watt amplifier. Don't look for one with an output impedance of 4 ohms. All amps have output impedances of less than 0.5 ohms, because we use voltage bridging and not power matching.
1000 Ohms = 1 kilo (not killow) Ohms