Your question is akin to asking how many beef steaks are there in an orange! The ampere (not amp!) is used to measure electric current; the hertz is used to measure frequency. These are two completely different quantities and do not equate to each other!
AC is alternating current. Or the voltage output changes from + to - USA uses 120 V AC 60 HZ as the normal plug power. Or the 120 V positive will go negative then positive every 1/60 seconds. Or the change will happen 60 times per second. Japan Uses 110V 50 Hz. That why a lot of the AC appliances that can be used in Japan or the US will be marked for both.
50 Hertz
If your device uses 900 Watts at 7.5 Amps, then it requires 120 volts. If you want to use it where the supplied current is 220 volts, then you'll need a transformer - but only if the device can operate on 50 Hz. Most places that use 220 Volts supply it at 50 Hz. If your device says it can operate on 50 Hz you can use a transformer.
50 amps.
in a home6000/120= 50 ampswatts/volts=amps
Hz means Hertz which is a measure of frequency. It was once just referred to as cycles per second. In the USA 60 Hz is the normal frequency for AC in a business or residence. It has nothing to do with the amperage per se.
Yes it can. It is within the normal voltage / HZ tolerance.
If your device uses 900 Watts at 7.5 Amps, then it requires 120 volts. If you want to use it where the supplied current is 220 volts, then you'll need a transformer - but only if the device can operate on 50 Hz. Most places that use 220 Volts supply it at 50 Hz. If your device says it can operate on 50 Hz you can use a transformer.
"50 Hz" is the shortened form of "50 hertz" which means "50 cycles per second". 50 Hz is the frequency of alternating current (ac) used by national electricity power services in many countries in Europe and elsewhere in the world whilst in USA, Canada and many other countries it is 60 Hz.
There is no inherent disadvantage of 50 Hz compared with 60 Hz, bearing in mind that systems that run at 50 Hz are designed to run at 50 Hz.
yes it can
50 amps.
50 amps.
106 amps
in a home6000/120= 50 ampswatts/volts=amps
10 Hz 10 Hz
Hz means Hertz which is a measure of frequency. It was once just referred to as cycles per second. In the USA 60 Hz is the normal frequency for AC in a business or residence. It has nothing to do with the amperage per se.
It is a motor where the frequency of the AC voltage is 50 cycles per second. In U.S.A. 60 Hz is standard. 50 Hz would be overseas.
In Norway it is 230 Volts, 16-25 amp, 60 Hz, grounded In rest of Europe it is 110 Volts 10-15 amps, 50 Hz, probably grounded too.