An LED typically consumes around 20mA (0.02 amps) of current to operate. Exceeding this current limit can damage the LED.
Depends on the size of the LED light and the voltage applied. An example is an LED 24 volt globe light that pulls 8 watts which draw 0.333333 amps. Take an LED 120 volt light bulb draws 12 watts and will pull 0.1 amps. The same bulb at 240 volts wil draw 0.05 amps. it really depends on the watts and voltage applied. An average would be about 0.1 amps.
You need the volts times the amps to equal 100 Watts. On 12 v that is 8.33 amps, or on 200 v is it 0.5 amps.
"Amps" is a steady thing. There's no such thing as "Amps per hour".The current through a 24-watt load is[ 24/the voltage across the load ] Amperes.
It depends on the voltage and whether the lamps are actually 40 watts or 40 watt equivalent. Watts / volts = amps
1.3 amps
Depends on the size of the LED light and the voltage applied. An example is an LED 24 volt globe light that pulls 8 watts which draw 0.333333 amps. Take an LED 120 volt light bulb draws 12 watts and will pull 0.1 amps. The same bulb at 240 volts wil draw 0.05 amps. it really depends on the watts and voltage applied. An average would be about 0.1 amps.
A: no device in electronics is ever rated by amps but rather by power dissipation. And certainly a LED IS NOT CAPABLE TO CARRY 15 AMPS IN A NORMAL ENVIRONMENT
Yes amps from Infinity, Sony and many others have led's built in.
It is drawing .06 amps.
You need the volts times the amps to equal 100 Watts. On 12 v that is 8.33 amps, or on 200 v is it 0.5 amps.
0.0001 amps will stop your heart if you are fully grounded.
"Amps" is a steady thing. There's no such thing as "Amps per hour".The current through a 24-watt load is[ 24/the voltage across the load ] Amperes.
it doesn't matter how many volts pass through your body, its the amps as little as 0.1 amps can kill a human
Multiply the vots by the amps to find the volt-amps. Or divide the volt-amps by the voltage to find the amps.
To answer this question the voltage needs to be known.
.1 amps will give you .1 amps.
It depends on the voltage and whether the lamps are actually 40 watts or 40 watt equivalent. Watts / volts = amps