The amount of 4 kW is equal to zero amps. To find the amperage the following equation should be used. Amps = Watts/Volts. So you can see that it depends on the voltage of the circuit if the amperage is to be found.
About 3/4 kW
The equation that you are looking for is kW = Amps x Volts/1000. My average Sony audio amp at home uses about 20 watts or .02 kW at a low audio output level.
To calculate the power in kilowatts (kW) from amps (A), you also need the voltage (V). If the voltage is 120V, then 500A would equal 60 kW (since Power (kW) = Current (A) x Voltage (V) / 1000). However, without knowing the voltage, it's not possible to calculate the power in kilowatts.
To calculate the kilowatts (kW) when given voltage (V) and current (I), you can use the formula: kW = V x I x √3 / 1000 For 480V, the calculation would be based on the current flowing through the circuit.
It depends on what kind of amp it is. Is it an audio amp or an rf amp . . A 3 kW audio amp would draw about 300 watts on average at most, so with a good reservoir capacitor the supply current would be 0.2 amps. A 3 kW rf amp for AM radio would draw about 4500 watts so the supply current would be 3 amps.
What is the KW of 4 50 amp rectifiers at a 48 volt DC system
no
The most you could use would be 48 kW. P = E x I = 240 x 200 = 48,000 = 48 kW
4 pole, 5 wire
About 3/4 kW
The equation that you are looking for is kW = Amps x Volts/1000. My average Sony audio amp at home uses about 20 watts or .02 kW at a low audio output level.
To calculate the power in kilowatts (kW) from amps (A), you also need the voltage (V). If the voltage is 120V, then 500A would equal 60 kW (since Power (kW) = Current (A) x Voltage (V) / 1000). However, without knowing the voltage, it's not possible to calculate the power in kilowatts.
"Watt" is a rate of using energy."4 kW" means 4,000 watts."4 kW for 6 hours" means 4,000 watts for 6 hours.If you use energy at the rate of 4 kW for 6 hours, then altogether you use24 kilowatt-hours, or 24,000 watt-hours, or 86,400,000 joules.
UK Mains is 230V therefore 6 KW is 6000/230 = 26 Amps. 3 phase is slightly different....... 6000/400V = 15 Amps/root 3 = 8.67 Amps per phase.
To calculate the kilowatts (kW) when given voltage (V) and current (I), you can use the formula: kW = V x I x √3 / 1000 For 480V, the calculation would be based on the current flowing through the circuit.
No; drawing more than the rated amperage from a transformer will cause it to overheat.
It depends on what kind of amp it is. Is it an audio amp or an rf amp . . A 3 kW audio amp would draw about 300 watts on average at most, so with a good reservoir capacitor the supply current would be 0.2 amps. A 3 kW rf amp for AM radio would draw about 4500 watts so the supply current would be 3 amps.