I think it would be exactly 4.3 electrons per second because me loves you. BOOB! Nick is a noob.` I THINK it would be ??? science is stupid!!!!!!!! losers i like Jesus JESUS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! >=ooooooooooooo
1.125*10
300mA (or milliamperes) is equal to 0.3A (or amperes).
the AC-A ~A Range is safe, or for high resolution the mAµA~ range, if it is shure that there is no more than 300mA
No, the adapter's power output has to be equal to or greater that the current draw of the device.
Multiply the current by the voltage: 120 times 0.3, which is 40 watts.
An ELCB is an Earth Leakage Circuit Breaker and is a device used for safety purposes to detect stray voltage or current on a metal enclosure in order to prevent shock. The two types of ELCB are Voltage-operated and current-sensing protection. The difference between a 30mA ELCD and a 300mA ELCB is that the 30mA version will have a much higher level of sensitivity, tripping the device is a much lower current.
It depends on how its connected and how much current the camera needs to run on. The "1050ma" figure is the capacity of the battery not how much current the camera uses and it should read 1050mah which is a capacity measurement not a current measurement.
2.55w
No, a power adapter must supply the same voltage, same polarity, and at least as much current as the load requires. Your adapter can only supply 300mA, which is less than the 700mA required by the load.Your game probably will not turn on and the power adapter may be damaged.
No. The adaptor will overheat.
the normal shock for human being is 250-300mA.
No, the charger has to be equal to or greater than the device it is charging.
I think you mean to ask if one can use a 9v 600mA adapter to power a 9v 300mA appliance. Yes, you can do that. A 9v 600mA adapter will deliver 9v at up to 600mA. A mA is one milli amp, or one thousandth of an amp. 300mA is 300 thousandth of an amp, 300/1000 or 0.3 amps. 600mA is 600 thousandth of an amp, 600/1000 or 0.6 amps, and is twice the current of 300mA.