We are saved by grace. First God reconciles individuals to Himself as an act of grace. The body of Christ is being built up out of unworthy, sinful people, to be an everlasting demonstration of the kindness of God. When God's work in us is completed, we will be creatures of unutterable bliss in a state of heavenly glory beyond anything we can now imagine. It will be God's work, not ours, and through the ages heaven will never cease to resound with the glad hallelujahs from the grateful hearts of the redeemed.
Additional Answer:
The Apostle Paul continues explaining his theme of how no 'Law" or act of man could save a person for eternal life. It happens because God wants it to be so by His Will called grace. But the peson must have 'faith' in Jesus' sacrifice as God desired. Then at the time of each individual's calling (see John 6:44;65), that person must fully repent and be baptized as Peter was inspired to tell us in Acts 3:19. We are then 'begotten' as Jesus was with God's Holy Spirit becoming eligible for eternal life in the spirit within the God Family:
Ephesians 2:8-10New King James Version (NKJV)8 For by grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God, 9 not of works, lest anyone should boast. 10 For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand that we should walk in them.
We have two bulb in parallel debiting 75 + 40 = 115 watts under 110 volts. I -current amperes V -potential volts W -power watts R -resistance ohms knowing W = V*I V = I*R W = R*I2 Then: 115 watts = 110 volts * I => I = 115/110 = 1,045 amperes R = 115/(115/110)2 = 1102 / 115 = 105,217 ohms ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Another way: First get the resistance of each bulb. Then we know that Rparallel = 1/(1/R1 + 1/R2 ) 75 watts = 110 volts * I => I = 75/110 ampere. R1 = 75/(75/110)2 = 1102/ 75 = 161,333 ohms. for the other bulb 40watts = 110 volts * I => I = 40/110 ampere. R2 = 40/(40/110)2 = 1102/ 40 = 302,5 ohms. meaning Rparallel = 1/(1/161,333+1/302,5) = 105,217 ohms That it's
Nominally 110 to 120 volt power strip is okay to connect to a standard outlet.
Please clarify what you mean to ask.
can you plug a 115 volt into a 110 volt
R = E/I = 110/4.75 = 23.16 ohms (rounded)
Yes, 110 V and 110 VAC refer to the same voltage level, with "VAC" specifically indicating that it is an alternating current (AC) voltage. The "V" stands for volts, while "AC" denotes the type of electrical current. Therefore, when you see 110 VAC, it is simply emphasizing that the voltage is alternating current at 110 volts.
110 V gives 240 T and 1200 V gives X? so X=(1200V*240T)/110 V=2619 Turns
The expression given has no obvious meaning.
110 v/DC
The 2.8 v-6 has 110 and the 2-5 inline has 85
That cord is all right for all voltages up to 250 v including 110 v, but the current drawn in amps must not exceed the rating of the cord, or it would overheat.
Equipment works over a range of voltage and should be interchangeable between 110 v and 120 v so the answer is yes.