Watts (P) = Volts (V) x Current (I)
Assumption V = 115 VAC, I = 1A
P= 115 x 1, P = 115W
1 Amp @ 115VAC power system = 115W
Assumption V =230VAC (international system), I =1A
P = 230 x 1, P = 230W
1 Amp @ 230VAC power system = 230W
Since the formula for calculating watts is:
amps * volts = watts
If you have 1 Amp, then the watts would equal the volts.
But recognize that volts will not always equal watts since you have to use the formula. For those students who think math is a waste of time, this is just another example of how it is everywhere in our lives.
It depends of the voltage applied. You'll find the answer using the formula P=V.I, where P is the power in watts, V is the voltage in volts and I is the current in amp (in the case, equal to 1 amp)
To answer this question a voltage is needed. 1 HP = 746 Watts. Amps = Watts/Volts.
Volts * Amps = Watts 12 Volt * 2 amp = 24 Watts
744
600 watts
watts = volts x amps, example-2 watts=2 volts x 1 amp, example- 2 watts=120 volts x .60 amp.
It depends of the voltage applied. You'll find the answer using the formula P=V.I, where P is the power in watts, V is the voltage in volts and I is the current in amp (in the case, equal to 1 amp)
To answer this question a voltage is needed. 1 HP = 746 Watts. Amps = Watts/Volts.
Volts * Amps = Watts 12 Volt * 2 amp = 24 Watts
The formula for watts is, Watts = Amps x Volts.
For a resistive load Watts = Volta * Amps. Therefore, you have 1/4 amp or 250 Milliamps (250ma)
120Watts=1Amp
Ohms does not equal watts. You need to know what voltage is across the resistor to determine how many watts it is drawing or how many watts the resistor should be rated for.Power is the voltage across the resistor SQUARED divided by the resistance. If this 4 ohm resistor has 12 volts across it then the watts power is (12 x 12) / 4 = 36 watts.1 Watt equals 1 Volt times 1 Amp.
volts times amps equal watts. So 12 volts times ? amp equals 1.5 watts. The current is 1.5/12 amps, which is 1/8 amp.
Total power output (Total RMS output): 1000 watts
300
400