The amperage required to run a cash register typically ranges from 1 to 5 amps, depending on the model and its features. Most modern electronic cash registers are designed to be energy-efficient, often operating on standard 110-120 volt outlets. It's important to check the manufacturer's specifications for the exact amperage needed for a specific cash register.
An LED typically consumes around 20mA (0.02 amps) of current to operate. Exceeding this current limit can damage the LED.
It depends on the voltage and whether the lamps are actually 40 watts or 40 watt equivalent. Watts / volts = amps
To calculate the amps drawn by an 18kW motor, you can use the formula: Amps = Power (Watts) / Voltage (Volts). Assuming a standard voltage of 120V, the motor would draw approximately 150Amps. Note that actual amps will depend on the specific voltage of the motor.
Assuming we are talking about 2300 BTU per hour, take 2300 and divide by the number of BTUs per watt-hour, 3.414, giving 673 watts. Then divide this by the voltage, 240, giving 2.81 amps.
The amperage of an oven roaster typically varies based on its wattage. Most standard electric roasters operate between 800 to 1,500 watts. To calculate the current in amps, you can use the formula: Amps = Watts/Volts. For example, a 1,500-watt roaster operating on a 120-volt circuit would draw approximately 12.5 amps.
You have to take a dump!
Anything that you haven't paid for Shopping carts cash register
An employer can take money out of the manager check if the register is short. The manager is responsible to make sure the cashier is accurate with their management of the cash.
Many impulse items are displayed in a manner that encourages quick choice and purchase, such as the candy, magazines, and batteries that are routinely placed near the cash register at checkout counters.
0.0001 amps will stop your heart if you are fully grounded.
The simple answer is none. The only way to get cash is to use the cash back option at a register. Kinda sucks as I have bills to pay that wont take the card.
You go to a computer store (Best Buy, Fry's, etc.) take the computer in the box, take it to the cash register, and be ready to pay by cash, change, debit, or credit. Then, after the cashier makes the transaction, you have just bought a computer.
it doesn't matter how many volts pass through your body, its the amps as little as 0.1 amps can kill a human
There's no guess about it, he is going to be fired for what he did. After stealing money from the cash register, he guessed he was going to get fired.
They were used just like other cash registers.You woulld press a big button and then would open. It didnt work all the time. There were many days when they broke because they were very fradgile ____________________________________________________________________ Uhh.. Yeah, thanks for that observation Captain Obvious.... That's not what he was asking. He's asking how did a mechanical cash register handle the math. And the answer is, it uses a mechanical system to convert the numbers into binary numbers. Addition is relitivly simple. For subtractions, the binary number is inverted and added together (this is why it sounded like the mechanical cash register was going nuts when subtraction had to take place). Example: 2=0010 1= 0001 0=0000 -1=1111 -2=1110 So, Someone walks up to the cash register with 2 dollars worth of stuff, gives the clerk 1 dollar, so they still owe 1 dollar. The cash register would perform this function: 0010+1111=10001 (drop the leading bit = 0001 or 1 dollar owed) Only limitation is how large the coggs were. There Ya go!
An LED typically consumes around 20mA (0.02 amps) of current to operate. Exceeding this current limit can damage the LED.
To answer this question the voltage needs to be known.