Voltage is a property of electrical potential. Amperes (and miliamperes) are the units of electrical current. Even though these are related to each other in a circuit, they are not the same thing, and they cannot be "converted" into each other.
Also, these properties are only related through a "load" the circuit provides (the resistance and inductance of the circuit), and make sense only when related to each other this way. If there is current, there will be voltage as well, but if there's only voltage, there will be no current unless there is some resistance as well (even a wire has resistance) - otherwise the circuit is "open" and no charge is flowing.
In a simple circuit with a voltage source and resistor:
milliamps = voltage*1000/resistance.
If your circuit has diodes, capacitors, inductors, etc. it gets much more complicated.
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.
You can't convert them directly, because they measure different things. The unit for energy is the Joule. Power means how fast energy is transferred; it is measured in Joules/second, also called Watts.
You don't have enough information in your question, you need to include the voltage as well. One relevant equation is V = I * R where V: Voltage, I: Amps, and R: Resistance. When you have the voltage divide the Ohm resistance into that and you'll get your amps.
There is no conversion. They measure different things. It's like asking 120 miles equals how many pounds? Voltage is also called electric potential. In a water analogy it's like pressure. Amperage is also called electric current. In a water analogy it's like flow rate.
V = (I) x (R) = 2 x 12 = 24 volts
At what voltage? When you know the voltage then, to get the amps those kilovolt-amps contain, you simply divide the kilovolt-amps by the voltage.
To convert high voltage (HV) amps to low voltage (LV) amps, you can use the formula: HV amps = LV amps x (LV voltage / HV voltage). By rearranging the formula, you can calculate LV amps by dividing HV amps by the ratio of HV voltage to LV voltage.
Can not do it without knowing the voltage I = E/R. Amps = Voltage/Ohms.
Milli = 1/1000. This is all the info that you should need.
To convert amps to watts, you also need the voltage. The formula to calculate power in watts is Watts = Amps x Volts. If the voltage is 120V, then 37.5A would be equivalent to 4500W (37.5A x 120V = 4500W).
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.
400 milli amps total.
To convert kilowatts to amps, you need to know the voltage of the circuit you are calculating for. Assuming a standard voltage of 240V, 11kW would be approximately 45.8 amps.
To convert watts to amps a voltage value must be given. Amps = Watts/Volts. Amps = .011/Volts.
No.By which I mean: amps and watts are not just different units, they're different TYPES of units. You can't convert amps to watts without knowing the voltage (if you DO know the voltage, multiply volts by amps to get watts).
To convert kVA to amps, you need to also know the voltage. If we assume a standard voltage of 480V, then 300 kVA would be approximately 360 amps. This is calculated by dividing the kVA by the voltage and then converting to amps using the formula: Amps = (kVA * 1000) / (1.732 * Volts) where 1.732 is the square root of 3.
5000w / 120 volts = 41.66 amps P=E*I transposed to I=P/E