Answer:
Volts x Amps = Watts
This question lacks sufficient information for an answer.
It isnt.
One watt is equal to one Joule of energy per second.
Amperage is current, or to state it more accurately, the amount of electrons passing through a point in a second.
1,000 milliAmps (mA) = 1Amp (A) 1,000,000 microAmps (uA) = 1Amp (A) so 1Amp is larger
2300 watt-hours for every hour it operates. Watts x Hours = watt hours.
I think mini watt is an alias for milli watt, so 1000 mini Watts equals 1 Watt
there is one Giga Giga watt in one Exa watt. So one Exa watt = one Giga Giga watt or 109 Giga watt or one Exa watt = 1018 watt and one Giga watt = 109 watt then one Exa watt = 109 Giga watt or one Exa watt = one billion Giga watt = one thousand million Giga watt
There are zero amps in a watt. I = W/E. W = A x V. It depends on how many volts there are. Since watts is amps times volts, amps is watts divided by volts. If you had a 120V circuit with 1 watt, there would be 1/120, or 0.00833 amps flowing in that circuit Note: This is the resistive answer, with a power factor of 1. For reactive loads, things change, but the basic question is answered.
120Watts=1Amp
Load factor and current are not directly related
1,000 milliAmps (mA) = 1Amp (A) 1,000,000 microAmps (uA) = 1Amp (A) so 1Amp is larger
NO
1000watts=1kilowatt
1000 kilowatts for 1 mega watt
James Watt is one possibility. There are many people with, Watt, as a surname.
1000000 or 10000000 i think
1hp=745 watt
yes
It will take a maximum of 1amp anything higher won't hurt it. The device controls the rate of amps used. Rule of thumb is to aim for an exact or about 5% more. Keep in mind the battery inside is rated at 3.7 volts at 800 milliamps. Roughly 5.2 watt hours (depending on model generation)
+- 250 watt to 500 watt