A Watt is a measure of power not voltage.
Voltage X Amps = Watts (in a DC circuit)
If you have a 55 watt light bulb for a car and you are looking for the amperage:
55W/13.8v = 3.99Amps (a typical alternator charging voltage is 13.8v)
4 volts and how many amps? Watts = amps x volts. It depends on the amount of current (in Amps) flowing at 4 Volts... See Ohms Law: Watts = Volts x Amps If you have 2 Amps flowing at 4 Volts you are dissipating/consuming 8 Watts. If you have 10 Amps flowing at 4 Volts you are dissipating/consuming 40 Watts.
Watts is the product of amps x volts. To give an answer the amperage needs to be given.
That depends on circuit voltage. 1 watt is equal to 1 volt times 1 amp.
That gives you 18.5 amps.
Ohms can be found by using these formulas. Ohms = Volts/Amps, Ohms = (Volts (squared))/Watts, Ohms = Watts/(Amps (squared)).
To calculate the amperage, use the formula: Amperes = Watts / Volts. In this case, 55 kW is 55,000 watts. So, Amperes = 55,000 watts / 460 volts ≈ 119.57 amps.
volts times amps = watts
Watts and Volts are two distinct types of measurement.
Amps, volts and watts are interrelated, but you need to do a little math. Amps * Volts = Watts
Watts or Amps? Amps would be the alternator, don't know where you would find watts. Volts X Amps = Watts, for example 12 Volts X 55 Amp Alternator = 660 Watts
Zero. Watts is the product of Amps x Volts. As you can see an amperage value is needed. Voltage = Watts/Amps. Volts = 200/? 20 volts
4 volts and how many amps? Watts = amps x volts. It depends on the amount of current (in Amps) flowing at 4 Volts... See Ohms Law: Watts = Volts x Amps If you have 2 Amps flowing at 4 Volts you are dissipating/consuming 8 Watts. If you have 10 Amps flowing at 4 Volts you are dissipating/consuming 40 Watts.
Volts don't make power. Watts do. Watts = (volts) x (amps) 1 horsepower = 746 watts
watts = volts x amps, example-2 watts=2 volts x 1 amp, example- 2 watts=120 volts x .60 amp.
41.666 amps. Divide watts by volts.
The formula to calculate the relationship between amps, volts and watts is Volts X Amps = Watts or Volts = Watts / Amps or Amps = Watts / Volts therefore; 200 Watts divided by 1.95 Amps is 102.5641 Volts.
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.