Pure water is a poor conductor of electricity because it has very few ions to carry current. However, when impurities or minerals are present in the water, it can conduct electricity to some extent. The current it can conduct depends on the concentration of ions present in the water.
The GE water heater SE50M12AA01 is a 5500 watts or 5.5 Kilowatts water tank. The amperage on such a tank is I = W/E. Amps = Watts/Volts. Since most hot water tanks in North America use a voltage of 240, the amps will be 22.9 amps. It must be fed with a #10 conductor from a 30 amp breaker.
A typical domestic water heater uses 3 kW. On a European 230 v system it would use 13 amps.
To determine the amperage of a 1650-watt hot water heater, you can use the formula: Amps = Watts/Volts. Assuming a standard voltage of 120 volts, the calculation would be 1650 watts / 120 volts = 13.75 amps. Therefore, a 1650-watt hot water heater uses approximately 13.75 amps.
1.3 amps
30
44.8AMPS
distilled water is pure H20 therefore there are no minerals or other crap in it that will conduct electricity. although technically you can run a very high voltage circuit with few amps through the few ions it has, it will not conduct a circuit your thinking of, so no :)
distilled water is pure H20 therefore there are no minerals or other crap in it that will conduct electricity. although technically you can run a very high voltage circuit with few amps through the few ions it has, it will not conduct a circuit your thinking of, so no :)
It will taken 8 amps <<>> The conversion of 2.5 sq mm wire to AWG is equal to a #12 wire. The ampacity of a #12 copper wire with an insulation factor of 90 degrees C is 20 amps.
None.
The GE water heater SE50M12AA01 is a 5500 watts or 5.5 Kilowatts water tank. The amperage on such a tank is I = W/E. Amps = Watts/Volts. Since most hot water tanks in North America use a voltage of 240, the amps will be 22.9 amps. It must be fed with a #10 conductor from a 30 amp breaker.
A typical domestic water heater uses 3 kW. On a European 230 v system it would use 13 amps.
Multiply the vots by the amps to find the volt-amps. Or divide the volt-amps by the voltage to find the amps.
.1 amps will give you .1 amps.
500 KVA how many amps? almost 650 Amps according to formula.
10 amps
10-2 Amps