No, 200mA is not the same as kilohms.
Amperes is a unit of current flow. Ohms is a unit of resistance. Other than being related by Ohm's law - Voltage = amperes x ohms - the two units are not the same.
the answer is .017 kilohms. To get this answer you will do a unit converions knowing that 1 kilohms is equal to 1 ohm.So...17 ohm * (1 kohm/1000 ohm) = .017I realize that's a typo, but that conversion should read 1 kilohm is equal to 1000 ohms.
That is 366,300 ohms.
A 9V 1A adapter will supply up to 9 Watts of power and a 9V 200mA adapter delivers up to 1.8W of power. The 200mA adaptor may not be able to supply enough power to a device that has been supplied with a 1A adapter. The 1A adaptor should operate equipment that originally used a 200mA adapter. Before using a different power supply, check that the outputs are both DC or both AC. If they are both DC, it is important to check that the polarity at the connector is the same for both. If AC and DC supplies are swapped or the polarity is swapped there is a risk that the equipment will be damaged.
When we see the prefix kilo, it means times one thousand, or x 1000. If we have 9.54 kilohms, we have 9.54 x 1000 ohms = 9,540 ohms.
The answer is 1.5 ohms. The 'R' is a multiplier (x1), and its position is the decimal point. So 1R5 means 1.5. Similarly, 15R would mean 15 ohms, and R15 would mean 0.15 ohms. If the letter 'k' was used, then 1K5 would mean 1.5 kilohms If the letter 'M' was used, then 1M5 would represent 1.5 megohms, etc.
33 kilohms = 0,033 megohms
200ma is .200 amps or .2 amps
kilohms.
the answer is .017 kilohms. To get this answer you will do a unit converions knowing that 1 kilohms is equal to 1 ohm.So...17 ohm * (1 kohm/1000 ohm) = .017I realize that's a typo, but that conversion should read 1 kilohm is equal to 1000 ohms.
That is 366,300 ohms.
Unrelated items ... no conversion possible.
Yes. The current rating should be the same or greater than the original. This means the adapter can supply up to 500mA; In your case it only needs to supply 200mA, so it is more than up to the job.
18 Volts.
No. The adaptor will overheat.
1000 kiloohms in 1 megaohm 120+2200=2320 kiloohms
There are, 2000/1000 = ,amps in 2000 milliamps. For the math challenged that is 2 amps.
A megohm is 1000 kilohms. So 295k is 0.295M