You need to check the currents in amps that each appliance takes, and the current in amps that the supply can supply. The divide one by the other and there is the answer.
Going by the power instead, a 120 v 10 amp supply can give 1200 watts.
In the United States toasters run on 120 volts.
It is not recommended to rewire a 120-volt motor to run on 220 volts, as it can damage the motor and pose a safety risk. It is best to purchase a motor designed to run on 220 volts to ensure proper functioning and safety.
150 volts is 125% of 120 volts.
120 volts and 240 volts. Typically 240 volts is supplied to the house electrical service entrance. It is split into it's 120 volt components via two buss bars. Hooking a circuit up to just one bar yields 120 volts. Hooking into both gives 240 volts.
To convert watts to amps at 120 volts, use the formula: Amps = Watts / Volts. For 1500 watts at 120 volts, the calculation would be: 1500 watts / 120 volts = 12.5 amps.
In the United States toasters run on 120 volts.
50% of 120 volts = 50% * 120 = 0.5 * 120 = 60 volts
Voltage does not affect the cost to run. You pay for the wattage, the higher the wattage the more it will cost to run.
North American household gas dryers run on 120 volts.
It is not recommended to rewire a 120-volt motor to run on 220 volts, as it can damage the motor and pose a safety risk. It is best to purchase a motor designed to run on 220 volts to ensure proper functioning and safety.
No. A water heater requires a 240 volt connection and cannot be re-wired to run on 120 volts. There isn't enough amperage in 120 volts to power the heating rods that are inside.
150 volts is 125% of 120 volts.
The potential difference of 120 volts and 12 volts is 108 volts.
150 / 120 = 1.251.25 x 100 = 125answer:125%150 volts is 125 percent of 120 volts.
Yes, 120 and 240 volts can be run in the same conduit.
It is best to run the appliance at the voltage for which it was designed. Frequently Stoves, Clothes dryers, Air conditioners, Heaters, and a few other appliances with their own circuits run on 240. Most household appliances that are plugged in run on 120. Outside of Baltimore, Maryland, one subdivision heated houses with 480 volts. One man worked on his own heater. He was electrocuted. What he did would have caused a spark with 120 volts, not an electrocution. Higher voltage usually costs less to run if the appliance is designed for higher voltage.
It depends on the amperage's of the appliances. You should be able to draw, Amps = Watts/Volts, 2500/120 = 20.8 amps at 120 volts.