How many Amps is the fridge pulling? Multiply the Amps by the 120V circuit you're plugging into and you'll get your Watts.
Watts Divided by 115 = AMPS
2 to 4 amps.
Yes it would work pretty well but it might not meet its accuracy specification.
The wiring should allow for 115 amps.
115 Kohm = 115 *103 = 115, 000 ohm
Ohm's law: current equals voltage divided by resistance, so a 203 ohm resistor would draw 0.57 amperes from a 115 volt power supply.
Yes. Power in both cases is 1.035 KW. Your meter shouldn't know the difference.
Watts is found by multiplying the volts by the amps. Normally a supply is provided at a fixed voltage, and the amount of current that is drawn depends on how many watts the equpiment requires.
Sir, i will not go by watts because it can take many hundreds of watts per outlet but it also depend on the size of the wire in the outlet the bigger the number the more watts.
Watts is determined by multiplying amps (found on tag with serial number or on data plate on compressor) by volts (example 115 volts times 9 amps= 1035 watts)
Divide the watts by the volts, so 32 / 115 is the answer in amps.
978 watts
Toaster, refrigerator, microwave, washing machine, mostly everything in your house.
Watts and Volts are two distinct types of measurement.
In U.S. voltage is usually referred to as 120 nowadays. so if in U.S. substitute 120 where 115 appears below. Power = Amperage times voltage So, in your example, 8.5 times 115 = Watts
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The number of watts measures the power, and Ohm's laws requires us to know the current as well as the voltage to determine the power.P = i x eFor example, if the fridge draws 10 amps at 115 volts, the power is 1150 watts.AnswerThe answer is that it depends on the fridge. Look at the nameplate information for your particular fridge; that's where you will find your answer.
You get watts from volts x amps, so 115 x2.5 = 287.5 watts
1 watt = 1 amp * 1 volt So.... In a house: 5 amps * 115 volts = 575 watts In a car: 5 amps * 12 volts = 60 watts