To find the rated current output of the generator, you must divide 375 kV.A (not 'kva') by the machine's rated voltage.
If you are talking of a power generator, it is mainly a stator and a rotor and excitor. To house all of these, there will be a cover and to rotate a generator there will be an engine coupled with the generator. To control operations of the generator, a panel is also provided which has some voltage, ampere and/or frequency indicators, at times generator speed is also indicated on it. Bigger generators with provision for hook up with other generators also have separate panel for synchronization with other generators or power distribution systems.
ampere temp and ampere fuse
Andre Ampere didn't 'invent' the ampere. The unit for current was named many years after the death of Ampere, in his honour. The ampere is defined in terms of its magnetic effect -i.e. the resulting force between two, parallel, current-carrying conductors. It was Ampere who discovered the relationship between current and force.
An ampere is the unit of (electrical) current.
An ampere hour (A.h) is a non-SI unit of measurement for electrical charge (the SI unit is a coulomb-which is equivalent to an 'ampere second'). So an ampere hour is equivalent to 3600 coulombs.Cells and batteries are generally rated in terms of ampere hours, as a convenient alternative to the kilocoulomb.
Full load amps for a three phase, 375KVA generator is 375 / (voltage in kV) / sqrt(3).
A 250 kAV generator produces 250,000 AV, which is the product of ampere and volt. If the same generator operates at 400V, for example, it will generate 250,000AV / 400V = 625A.
because the generator generate apparent power in kilos and it is written as ( kilo volt ampere OR KVA) it is the combination of active and reactive powers where active will be used by the consumers and the reactive will come back to the generator.
MVA(Mega volt ampere) is the cos component of MW. So one should know the power factor of the system for conversion from MVA to MW.
If you are talking of a power generator, it is mainly a stator and a rotor and excitor. To house all of these, there will be a cover and to rotate a generator there will be an engine coupled with the generator. To control operations of the generator, a panel is also provided which has some voltage, ampere and/or frequency indicators, at times generator speed is also indicated on it. Bigger generators with provision for hook up with other generators also have separate panel for synchronization with other generators or power distribution systems.
No it is not normal. Ideally both the generators share the load equally provided both generator ratings and other parameters are same.
ampere is the unit in all the systems for electric current
There is no such thing as a 'total current' for a three-phase generator in the sense that you suggest -i.e. the sum of the phase currents. Current ratings are based the current that the machine can deliver to a load on a 'per line' basis.
Ampere, milliampere, microampere, nanoampere, picoampere.
In Andre Ampere's basement.
Ampere or amp.
i think it is AMPERE itself.....