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.
A voltage of 240 volts is not a common three phase voltage. Single phase kva of 240 voltas and 50 amps is I x E/1000 = 240 x 50 = 12000/1000 = 12 kVa -- Assuming the 240 volts is phase to phase voltage, and this is a three phase application: KVA = V*I*sqrt (3) = 20.78KVA
It depends on the voltage and whether it is a single- or three-phase load.
To answer this question a voltage needs to be stated and whether the load is three phase or single phase. Without the voltage the amperage can not be calculated. For single phase, Amps = kva x 1000/voltage, for three phase, Amps = kva x 1000/1.73 x voltage.
Divide by your number of phases 1 or 3 then divide by your Voltage. If its a 3 phase supply Voltage you need to divide by your 3 phase voltage for balanced loads and by your single phase voltage for unbalanced loads requiring a neutral.
Yes of course!! 10 kva electrical power is 10 kva electrical power either it would be three phase or single phase. But other factors i.e. current, voltage changes accordingly. Actually this question is quit confusable. Because in 3phase system, if each phase gives 10kva power (single phase power = 10 kva) then 3 phase power will be 10 X 3 = 30 Kva If we go leteratualy towasrds the question, then the asnwer will be - No. becasue 10 kva supply to 3 phase load will be 3phase supply(i.e440V) & 10kva supply to single phase load will be single supply (i.e 250V).
For single phase,kva=voltage(volts)xcurrent(amps)/1000 For,three phase,kva=1.732xvoltsxamps/1000
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.
If using L-L voltages, the three phase power = V*I*sqrt(3)If using L-N voltages, the single phase power = V*ITo convert single phase to three phase, multiply by 3.
135 A at 120 v single-phase is 16.2 kVA. With a 208 v three-phase supply you get three single-phase 120 v supplies, so the same kVA is produced with a balanced load of 45 amps on each phase.
It depends on the voltage and whether it is a single- or three-phase load.
Amperes when kva is shown. The formula is, Amps = kva x 1000/1.73 x volts.
A voltage of 240 volts is not a common three phase voltage. Single phase kva of 240 voltas and 50 amps is I x E/1000 = 240 x 50 = 12000/1000 = 12 kVa -- Assuming the 240 volts is phase to phase voltage, and this is a three phase application: KVA = V*I*sqrt (3) = 20.78KVA
kva*cos(phase angle)
It depends on the voltage and whether it is a single- or three-phase load.
To answer this question a voltage needs to be stated and whether the load is three phase or single phase. Without the voltage the amperage can not be calculated. For single phase, Amps = kva x 1000/voltage, for three phase, Amps = kva x 1000/1.73 x voltage.
Divide by your number of phases 1 or 3 then divide by your Voltage. If its a 3 phase supply Voltage you need to divide by your 3 phase voltage for balanced loads and by your single phase voltage for unbalanced loads requiring a neutral.
Yes of course!! 10 kva electrical power is 10 kva electrical power either it would be three phase or single phase. But other factors i.e. current, voltage changes accordingly. Actually this question is quit confusable. Because in 3phase system, if each phase gives 10kva power (single phase power = 10 kva) then 3 phase power will be 10 X 3 = 30 Kva If we go leteratualy towasrds the question, then the asnwer will be - No. becasue 10 kva supply to 3 phase load will be 3phase supply(i.e440V) & 10kva supply to single phase load will be single supply (i.e 250V).