Depends on what the voltage is going from - and to.
primary winding and secondary winding how this turn.
There is (240 / 1344) = 179 milli volts per turn. The output voltage is 50 volts, so 50 / .179 = 280 turns on the secondary.
The primarys are marked with the letter H and the secondary terminals are marked with the letter X. The rest depends on how many phases, single transformer, bank transformes, secondary outputs desired, delta or wye or both, etc..... A: most of the time there are not marked with anything. for a power transformer the primary will offer a resistance of 15 ohms the secondary can be more or less depends on applications
In an AC circuit it is the fluctuation of the sine wave which causes a varying magnetic field which in turn induces a current to flow in the secondary.
First of all, transformers are rated in volt amperes, not watts. Secondly, in order to determine a transformer's turns-ration, you need to know its primary and secondary voltage ratings.
Output from secondary is about 6.8V rms, on no load. On the primary side, you have 140 / 120 = .86 volts per turn. Therefore, on the secondary side you will have 8*.86 = 6.8 volts.
Output from secondary is about 6.8V rms, on no load. On the primary side, you have 140 / 120 = .86 volts per turn. Therefore, on the secondary side you will have 8*.86 = 6.8 volts.
Transformer turn ratio is the ratio between the turns on the primary side and the number of turns on the secondary side. For instance if you have a turn ration of 100:200 the primary side has 100 turns and the secondary side has 200 turns. This will be a step up transformer. 10 volts AC into the primary side will result in 20 volts on the secondary side. There will be a decrease in current but the voltage will increase. The total power into and out of the transformer will be the same minus some losses for resistance in the windings.
200V / 240V 5 / 6
The beluga whale
primary winding and secondary winding how this turn.
It is compulsory to attend school in Australia until you turn 15, so presumably, everybody attends secondary school for at least a few years.
No it is a secondary consumer. They eat mussels which in turn eat seaweed.
The secondary consumers, such as lobsters, feed on the herbivores. The tertiary consumers, in turn, feed on the secondary consumers, and so on.
if the vehicle it is in is a truck i would say 12volt if it is in a bus it is 24volt this is only due to the starter and the direction the starter will turn
there are 6 unless you turn the cube on its side.
If you are referring to a small 12 volt battery as used in a cordless drill, the answer is no. Those batteries do not have near enough amps to turn over a vehicle engine.