1.5 volts is not nearly enough voltage to harm anyone or any animal. You body has about 500 ohms of resistance which is entirely too much for 1.5 volts to push current through your body at a detectable level.
The terminal strip's rating is 15 amps at 600 volts. It does not matter what the voltage is up to 600 volts, the maximum amperage allowed on the strip is 15 amps. It could be 15 amps at 12 volts or 15 amps at 600 volts or any voltage in between.
In the US a general purpose receptacle outlet would be 120 volts; England 240 volts, France 115 volts, Libya 127 volts, Okinawa 100 volts, Tanzania 230 volts . . .; all depends on where your house is.
No. You are billed for electricity by wattage per hour. The formula for watts is amps times volts. W = A x V. At a set voltage and using the formula you can see that if the amperage goes up so will the wattage value. Use 120 volts and multiply it by each of your amperages in the question.
It's the amps that are controlled by the breaker not the volts. You can have a 600 volt 15 amp breaker, you can have a 347 volt 15 amp breaker. The breaker will trip when you exceed 15 AMPS.
In Canada and the United States, wall outlet voltage is standardized at 110 to 120 volts (anywhere in that range is considered "OK"). In Europe - most of the rest of the world, actually - it is standardized at 220 volts.
You can't calculate how many volts with that information; you could calculate the energy - 60 watts for 15 minutes is equivalent to 54,000 joules.
The terminal strip's rating is 15 amps at 600 volts. It does not matter what the voltage is up to 600 volts, the maximum amperage allowed on the strip is 15 amps. It could be 15 amps at 12 volts or 15 amps at 600 volts or any voltage in between.
In the US a general purpose receptacle outlet would be 120 volts; England 240 volts, France 115 volts, Libya 127 volts, Okinawa 100 volts, Tanzania 230 volts . . .; all depends on where your house is.
No. You are billed for electricity by wattage per hour. The formula for watts is amps times volts. W = A x V. At a set voltage and using the formula you can see that if the amperage goes up so will the wattage value. Use 120 volts and multiply it by each of your amperages in the question.
That depends on the application [use] of the alternator. For automotive applications, NO, 15 Volts DC is not too much. Generally, an acceptable voltage output range for automotive applications is 13 Volts minimum to 16 volts maximum.
It's the amps that are controlled by the breaker not the volts. You can have a 600 volt 15 amp breaker, you can have a 347 volt 15 amp breaker. The breaker will trip when you exceed 15 AMPS.
Strangely enough, it is 15 million!
There is a 3.75 Volt drop across each bulb.
12 volts with the engine off. 13.5 to 15-5 volts with the engine idling.
The NEMA 15-40 electrical receptacle is a type of outlet that is designed to handle 250 volts and 40 amps of electricity. It has a specific configuration of prongs and is commonly used for high-powered appliances and equipment.
15 voltsThe result would only be 15 volts if they were connected in series. If in parallel, a 10v and a 5v battery would probably come out with a voltage of either 10 volts or 7.5 volts, there's no way to tell for sure though.
In Canada and the United States, wall outlet voltage is standardized at 110 to 120 volts (anywhere in that range is considered "OK"). In Europe - most of the rest of the world, actually - it is standardized at 220 volts.