watts are equal to amps times volts.
BTU and kilowatt-hours are measures of energy, while power is measured in either kilowatts or BTU per hour. 1 kilowatt-hour is equal to 3412 BTU, or 1 kilowatt equals 3412 BTU/hr. 8000 BTU per hour is equal to 2.344 kilowatts, which is 19.53 amps at 120 v.
A kw, or Killowatt = 8.7 amps. So, 30 x 8.7 = approximately 260 amps. A wall Air conditioner draws about 12-15 amps. A refrigerator about 10-12 amps, a 100 watt light bulb .87 amps or less than 1 amp. Houses typically have either a 100 amp main breaker or, 150 and up. In the old days, 60 amps was common. Your answer is, as many houses as it takes to use 260 amps. If it's for a generator, as backup, 4-8 houses to keep the required things working. BUT use a large cable to run the power. 260 amp cable is about 3 ought size. Good luck.
To find the number of amps in a 17 kW (kilowatt) system, you can use the formula: Amps = Watts / Volts. Assuming a standard voltage of 230V, the calculation would be 17,000 watts / 230 volts, which equals approximately 73.91 amps. If the voltage is different, you would need to adjust the calculation accordingly.
Kilowatt has no reference to time. Kilowat hour has one hour.
Watts = Volts x Amps, if you use your algebra you will find that it's approx 14 Amps.
Amps is a measurement of current. Watts (or kilowatts) is a measure of power. To get the power from the current, you have to know the electrical potential or volts used to produce the current. Amps × Volts = Watts (or Current × Electrical Potential = Power). Incidentally, a kilowatt is 1000 watts, so you'll have to divide your answer by 1000. e.g. if your volts is 40, then 25 amps × 40 volts = 1000 watts. 1000 watts (divided by 1000) is 1kw or kilowatt.
Amps can not give you a kilowatt with out a voltage being applied to the question. Watts = Amps x Volts. Amps = 1000/ Volts.
The relationship between amps and kilowatts depends on the voltage of the circuit. To calculate the amperage for a given kilowatt value, you need to know the voltage as well. The formula to convert kilowatts to amps is Amps = (kW * 1000) / Volts.
BTU and kilowatt-hours are measures of energy, while power is measured in either kilowatts or BTU per hour. 1 kilowatt-hour is equal to 3412 BTU, or 1 kilowatt equals 3412 BTU/hr. 8000 BTU per hour is equal to 2.344 kilowatts, which is 19.53 amps at 120 v.
The same as it can generate in a day, or in a year, or in a second. Kilowatt is a unit of power, not a unit of energy.
If the rating is 13 KW, they should be able to produce about 11 KW of actual power. This is 0.011 MW of power
A kw, or Killowatt = 8.7 amps. So, 30 x 8.7 = approximately 260 amps. A wall Air conditioner draws about 12-15 amps. A refrigerator about 10-12 amps, a 100 watt light bulb .87 amps or less than 1 amp. Houses typically have either a 100 amp main breaker or, 150 and up. In the old days, 60 amps was common. Your answer is, as many houses as it takes to use 260 amps. If it's for a generator, as backup, 4-8 houses to keep the required things working. BUT use a large cable to run the power. 260 amp cable is about 3 ought size. Good luck.
amps like.. amplifiers? it depends on how many speakers you have. or amps like.. current draw? again. depends on your power needs, your power amps... ect
You look at the job you need to do, ie, how many volts and amps, or volts and watts, that you need. Then you look in the catalogs for a solar cell or solar cell array to produce that much power.
Total power output of the sun: 3.86 x 1023 kilowatts (386,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 kilowatts) Total solar power received on Earth: 1.74 x 1014 kilowatts (174,000,000,000,000 kilowatts) Solar power falling on 1 square meter of ground: 750 watts (0.75 kilowatt) Output of a 1 square meter solar panel: 120 watts (0.12 kilowatt)
Six panels would produce six times the power, 1.2 kilowatts. Note that this happens only in direct sunlight, and in other conditions the power produced is much less. In ideal conditions the panels would produce 1.2-kilowatt-hours every hour, so in an 8-hour day it would be 9.6 kilowatt-hours, but not when it's cloudy.
Aprox 12 amps.