This will depend upon the resistance of the load. You will have to use an Ohmmeter to do this. BE SURE POWER IS OFF when you do this, however. You'll smoke your meter!!.
Then you can use Ohm's Law and the formulas to solve this. However, the easiest way to find voltage is to simply use a voltmeter and measure the source voltage.
AnswerThere are no volts in amperes! They measure two different quantities. Your question is rather like asking, "How many kilometres are there in a kilogram"!
At 120 volts it will pull 4.166 amps. At 240 volts it will pull 2.08 amps.
If the 100 amps is powered by 10 volts, you have 1 kw, or 1000 watts. watts = volts X current The 'k' simply means kilo, or thousand.
Watts = Volts times Amps. Therefore, if the voltage was 220 volts, the motor would draw 500 amps. If the voltage was 4,000 volts, the motor would draw 27.5 amps. The voltages for large powerful motors tend to be relatively high, for example in the 380 Volts to 11,500 Volts range.
Power = Volts * current [p = E*I]; 120volts*10amps = 1200watts
There are zero amps in 3000 volts. A load needs to be connected to the voltage.
It depends on how many Amps (current) are applied to the voltage. Watt = Volts x Amps. e.g. 12 volts @ 5 amps = 60 watts
Ohm's Law: Voltage = Amperes times Resistance 9 volts = amps * 10 ohms amps = .9
4 volts and how many amps? Watts = amps x volts. It depends on the amount of current (in Amps) flowing at 4 Volts... See Ohms Law: Watts = Volts x Amps If you have 2 Amps flowing at 4 Volts you are dissipating/consuming 8 Watts. If you have 10 Amps flowing at 4 Volts you are dissipating/consuming 40 Watts.
It's watts divided by volts equals amps. Example: 1200 watts at 120 volts is 10 amps. To get the watts if you know the amps, multiply the amps times the volts. 10 amps at 120 volts is 1200 watts.
160 amps at 12v.
160 amps at 12v.
For a single phase circuit, the equation you are looking for is I = W/E. Amps = Watts/Volts.
The power can be calculated using the formula P = V x I, where P is power in watts, V is voltage in volts, and I is current in amps. Plugging in 240 volts and 10 amps, the power would be 2400 watts.
Ohm's law: Volts = Amps * Ohms, or Amps = Volts / Ohms 12 volts / 0.5 ohms = 24 amps
10 amps 250 volts or 16 amps 250 volts.
The formula to calculate the relationship between amps, volts and watts is Volts X Amps = Watts or Volts = Watts / Amps or Amps = Watts / Volts therefore; 200 Watts divided by 1.95 Amps is 102.5641 Volts.
It depends on how many Amps (current) are applied to the voltage. Watt = Volts x Amps. e.g. 12 volts @ 5 amps = 60 watts