I believe a kilowatt and a kilovolt-amp are mathematically equivalent units, but they are used in different contexts.
Watts are used when talking about average or instantaneous power or "true" power. Volt-amps are used when talking about Apparent power.
Va=volts x amps. The K stands for one thousand. So 1 Kva is one thousand watts. So 415v times 120a= 49,800 what's. You divide that by a thousand and you get 49.8. So it would be 49.8 Kva.
The same way, as you convert Appels to Carrots ........... There is a formula: KVAr = KVA / KW or cos=KW/KVA > Yes, we are treating KW, KVA, & KVAr as the 3 sides in a 90 deg TRIANGLE ! KW= vertical katede KVAr = horizontal katede KVA = hypotenuse
remove three 0s will do the trick
Multiply by 1000. .19MVA = 190kVA
To convert amps to kilovolt-amperes (kVA), you can use the formula: kVA = (Amps × Voltage) / 1000. The voltage level is essential for the calculation, as kVA is a function of both current (in amps) and voltage (in volts). For example, at a voltage of 400V, 350 amps would be approximately 140 kVA (350 × 400 / 1000). Without the voltage value, the kVA cannot be accurately determined.
kva*cos(phase angle)
5kw = 6.25 kva becoz kva = kw/ pf if we take pf is o.8
To convert amps to kVA, you use the following formula: Amps = (kVA x 1000 / voltage) / 1.73
You cannot convert them. KVA is a measure of power, while amperes are a measure of current.
a kva is 1000 vaK is kilo, which means 1000 similar to how a kilometer is 1000 metersTransformers are usually rated in KVA, so a 45 KVA Transformer is a 45 000 VA Transformer
To convert 2 kW to kVA in single phase, you need to know the power factor. If we assume a power factor of 0.8 (common for many single-phase loads), the conversion formula is kVA = kW / power factor. Therefore, for 2 kW at a power factor of 0.8, the result would be 2 kVA / 0.8 = 2.5 kVA.
Va=volts x amps. The K stands for one thousand. So 1 Kva is one thousand watts. So 415v times 120a= 49,800 what's. You divide that by a thousand and you get 49.8. So it would be 49.8 Kva.
The same way, as you convert Appels to Carrots ........... There is a formula: KVAr = KVA / KW or cos=KW/KVA > Yes, we are treating KW, KVA, & KVAr as the 3 sides in a 90 deg TRIANGLE ! KW= vertical katede KVAr = horizontal katede KVA = hypotenuse
You must know the current or resistance to convert voltage to power.
Multiply by 1000. .19MVA = 190kVA
remove three 0s will do the trick
Amperes when kva is shown. The formula is, Amps = kva x 1000/1.73 x volts.