50 amps. I=P/E.
hurricanes produce at least 300-600 mm of rain.
600$
The good folks at SAS have put together an emission calculator for all types of aeroplanes if you want the answer by specific type. As for cumulative emissions it is estimated that some 16,000 commercial aircraft reoduce 600 million tonnes of carbon dioxide every year.
600-800 pounds dry, wet double that
600 F = 315.56 C
hurricanes produce at least 300-600 mm of rain.
600W
600 + apmeres
The maximum amperage that can be applied to a #14 wire is 15 amps. The 600 volts is just an insulation rating. Check the nameplate on the dryer to see what the amperage and voltage the manufacturer recommends. If the nameplate just states a wattage use the following formula to find the amperage. Amps = Watts/ Volts.
Volts
None.
Enough to lift a small rocket 5-600 feet.
1 + 1/4 turn
600 * 600 = 360,000
Devices are rated by voltage and amperage. If you have a source rated for 600 volts you can use a 250 volt device, but not vice versa.
The standard home voltage connection is single phase 120/240 volts. The amperage is what ever the service size requires. For new homes it is usually 200 amps. For business voltages it usually is three phase 120/208, amperage demand governed by equipment. For new industrial and commercial buildings the voltages are three phase 347/600 volts, amperage demand governed by equipment. For old industrial and commercial buildings the voltages are three phase 277/480 volts, amperage demand governed by equipment. The three phase 277/480 systems are being phased out for newer 347/600 systems.
This depends on what you are meaning by "Average". A typical small generator you can throw in the back of a truck will produce 120 volts, some can do 240. Building backup generators would produce whatever voltage is needed for that building (if it's a plant that using 480 volts, it will produce 480 volts). "Large" Wind turbine generators often produce 600-1000 volts; good sized power plants (100MW and up) will typically have a terminal voltage of 10-30kV.