There are zero volts in a watt. Watts are the product of amps x volts. Without stating the voltage and amperage, the wattage of a device can not be calculated.
Power (in watts) is calculated by multiplying voltage (in volts) by current (in amperes). So the power of 1 volt would need additional information about the current flowing through the circuit to determine the wattage.
Volts * Amps = Watts 12 Volt * 2 amp = 24 Watts
Since watts and volt-amps are different units of power, you cannot directly convert watts to volt-amps without considering the power factor of the load. In an ideal resistive circuit, 100 watts would be equivalent to 100 volt-amps. However, in practical applications with reactive components, the relationship between watts and volt-amps can vary.
watts = volts * amps--> Amps = watts/ volts therefore; 2000/220= 9.09 amps
To determine how many 12-volt, 50-watt bulbs can be used on a 100 VA transformer, first convert the transformer's capacity from VA to watts, which is effectively the same for resistive loads (100 watts in this case). Each 50-watt bulb requires 50 watts, so you can divide the total available watts by the wattage of one bulb: 100 watts ÷ 50 watts/bulb = 2 bulbs. Therefore, you can use 2 of the 12-volt, 50-watt bulbs on a 100 VA transformer.
770 watts.
Amps, volts and watts are interrelated, but you need to do a little math. Amps * Volts = Watts
Power (in watts) is calculated by multiplying voltage (in volts) by current (in amperes). So the power of 1 volt would need additional information about the current flowing through the circuit to determine the wattage.
Volts * Amps = Watts 12 Volt * 2 amp = 24 Watts
Watts = Amps X Volts Grab your calculator!
One watt is one amp times one volt
On a 12-volt system 1.6 amps is 12x1.6 watts, 19.2 watts
my aircondition is 13000 btu on 220 volt ac is how many watts
The estimated watts of a vacuum cleaner needed is 7 to 12 amps or 144 watts.
Since watts and volt-amps are different units of power, you cannot directly convert watts to volt-amps without considering the power factor of the load. In an ideal resistive circuit, 100 watts would be equivalent to 100 volt-amps. However, in practical applications with reactive components, the relationship between watts and volt-amps can vary.
It is expressed in Volt-Amperes not Watts.
This question does is not answerable. A watt is a volt times an amp. With out knowing how many amps the bulbs use there is no answer.