It depends on the power factor, which depends on the reactance of the load.
For a typical power factor of 0.92, 150 KVAR translates to 383 KVA, which translates to 352 KW.
Power factor is the cosine of the phase angle (theta) between voltage and current. KVA times cosine (theta) is KW, while KVA times sine (theta) is KVAR.
To convert AC tonnage to kVA and kW, use the following formulas: For kVA: kVA = (tonnage x 3.517) For kW: kW = (tonnage x 3.517 x power factor). Remember to consider the power factor of the system when converting from tonnage to kVA and kW.
To convert 2 kW to kVA in single phase, you need to know the power factor. If we assume a power factor of 0.8 (common for many single-phase loads), the conversion formula is kVA = kW / power factor. Therefore, for 2 kW at a power factor of 0.8, the result would be 2 kVA / 0.8 = 2.5 kVA.
There are 1,000 watts (W) in a kilowatt (kW) and 1,000 volt-amps (VA) in a kilovolt-ampere (kVA). Therefore, 1 kVA is equal to 1 kW.
12000 BTU is equivalent to approximately 3.51 kVA.
The kW rating of a transformer can be calculated by multiplying the kVA rating by the power factor. For example, if the power factor is 0.8, then the kW rating of a 100 kVA transformer would be 80 kW. You can also use the formula: kW = kVA x power factor.
kva and kw are related as KVA = (KW/PF) pf:power factor
To convert AC tonnage to kVA and kW, use the following formulas: For kVA: kVA = (tonnage x 3.517) For kW: kW = (tonnage x 3.517 x power factor). Remember to consider the power factor of the system when converting from tonnage to kVA and kW.
To convert 2 kW to kVA in single phase, you need to know the power factor. If we assume a power factor of 0.8 (common for many single-phase loads), the conversion formula is kVA = kW / power factor. Therefore, for 2 kW at a power factor of 0.8, the result would be 2 kVA / 0.8 = 2.5 kVA.
There are 1,000 watts (W) in a kilowatt (kW) and 1,000 volt-amps (VA) in a kilovolt-ampere (kVA). Therefore, 1 kVA is equal to 1 kW.
The same way, as you convert Appels to Carrots ........... There is a formula: KVAr = KVA / KW or cos=KW/KVA > Yes, we are treating KW, KVA, & KVAr as the 3 sides in a 90 deg TRIANGLE ! KW= vertical katede KVAr = horizontal katede KVA = hypotenuse
KVA is the vector sum of real and reactive power; put differently, KVA at a specified power factor will tell you how many KW you have: KW = KVA * pf You must provide a power factor or power factor angle (if angle, replace pf with cos (pf) in above equation) or total reactive power to calculate.
KVA=KW*Power factor, considering PF 0.9, 6KVA=KW*0.9 KW=6/.9=6.67
The answer: 17070 BTU The math: 3414 BTU = 1 KVA (KW) so 5 KVA = 17070 BTU
Multiply by Amps.
It depends on the power factor, which you did not specify. Power factor is the ratio of true vs apparent power. KVA * PF = KW. Please restate the question.
kVA = kW divided by (power factor). The power factor is the cosine of the angle between voltage and current.
kva*cos(phase angle)