Volts and watts are different units of measurement in the International System of Units (SI). Volts (V) measure electrical potential difference, while watts (W) measure power. The relationship between volts and watts depends on the electrical resistance of the circuit. In a circuit with a resistance of 1 ohm, 1 volt is equal to 1 watt.
That depends on circuit voltage. 1 watt is equal to 1 volt times 1 amp.
Ohms does not equal watts. You need to know what voltage is across the resistor to determine how many watts it is drawing or how many watts the resistor should be rated for.Power is the voltage across the resistor SQUARED divided by the resistance. If this 4 ohm resistor has 12 volts across it then the watts power is (12 x 12) / 4 = 36 watts.1 Watt equals 1 Volt times 1 Amp.
The answer is "It Depends" Watts of electircal power is defined as Voltage x Current. Amperage is a unit of current. In most houses in the US the voltage is 120 volts AC. A 100 watt light bulb in the house would have 120 volts across it so the current flowing would be: Watts = Volts x Amps 100 watts = 120 volts x I amps A amps = 100 watts / 120 volts A amps = 5/6 amps ANSWER watts is a product of voltage and current .One quantity will never suffice
This is 220 volts AC, I assume. 10 x 220 = 2.2kVA of power. The real power will depend on the power factor. Take the power factor times 2,200 to find the watts.
The formula you are looking for is Watts = Amps x Volts. killo = 1000 1 kw = 1000 watts.
That depends on circuit voltage. 1 watt is equal to 1 volt times 1 amp.
Volts don't make power. Watts do. Watts = (volts) x (amps) 1 horsepower = 746 watts
volts times amps equal watts. So 12 volts times ? amp equals 1.5 watts. The current is 1.5/12 amps, which is 1/8 amp.
Watts = Amps x Volts x Power Factor Power factor varies from 0 to 1 with 1 being a pure resistive load like a light bulb. A motor would have a lesser value. So if your load is resistive just use 1 x 440.
watts = volts x amps, example-2 watts=2 volts x 1 amp, example- 2 watts=120 volts x .60 amp.
Ohms does not equal watts. You need to know what voltage is across the resistor to determine how many watts it is drawing or how many watts the resistor should be rated for.Power is the voltage across the resistor SQUARED divided by the resistance. If this 4 ohm resistor has 12 volts across it then the watts power is (12 x 12) / 4 = 36 watts.1 Watt equals 1 Volt times 1 Amp.
It depends on how many amperes there are. If you have 1 amperes, then you get 260 watts. If you have 260 amperes, then you have 67,600 watts. If you have 0.001 amperes, then you have 0.26 watts. Its just watts = volts times amperes. Of course, the limiting factor is the available power behind the 260 volts, but you did not say anything about that.
Volts don't make power. Watts do. Watts = (volts) x (amps) 1 horsepower = 746 watts (Doesn't matter if the source is AC, DC, or a combination of both.)
Watts (P) = Volts (V) x Current (I) Assumption V = 115 VAC, I = 1A P= 115 x 1, P = 115W 1 Amp @ 115VAC power system = 115W Assumption V =230VAC (international system), I =1A P = 230 x 1, P = 230W 1 Amp @ 230VAC power system = 230W
You cannot convert watts to amps, since watts are power and amps are coulombs per second (like converting gallons to miles). HOWEVER, if you have at least least two of the following three: amps, volts and watts then the missing one can be calculated. Since watts are amps multiplied by volts, there is a simple relationship between them.
Watts = Amps X Volts Grab your calculator!
1 kW = 1000 watts. Formula is Watts = Amps x Volts. As you can see to give you a answer I need a value for volts. Transpose the formula to read I = 1000/volts.