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To answer this question the voltage needs to be known.
That depends entirely upon the type of motor. A car starting motor may take a few hundred Amps for the short period.
At 240v single phase it's 70.8 amps. If it runs on 2 wires plus ground, take the voltage rating of the equipment and divide that into the watts to get amps. At 480v 3 phase it's 25.8 amps. At 208v 3 phase it's 47.2 amps. <<>> There are zero amps in 14 kW. A voltage needs to be stated. I = W/E, Amps = Watts/Volts.
If the 100 amps is powered by 10 volts, you have 1 kw, or 1000 watts. watts = volts X current The 'k' simply means kilo, or thousand.
Watts= voltage times amps. So if you divide Watts by voltage, you will get amps = .33333 or about a 1/3 amp load. This is assuming a 120 volt circuit.
53000Amps
0.0001 amps will stop your heart if you are fully grounded.
it doesn't matter how many volts pass through your body, its the amps as little as 0.1 amps can kill a human
The power required to run a basic computer will be 1.35 amps for startup and .7 to .9 amps continuous. The power requirements to run an 17" monitor will be 3.5 amps startup and 1.5 amps continuous.
Just take the voltage and multiply it by the amps. That should give you a close approximation of the watts used. For instance, 117 volts at 4.5 amps = 5265 watts.
To answer this question the voltage needs to be known.
4.16 Amps
You just have to divide the watts by the voltage to find the amps. For example 60 watts on a 120 v system would take ½ amp.
That depends entirely upon the type of motor. A car starting motor may take a few hundred Amps for the short period.
First you need to find out how many amps the heater draws. Then use this formula: Volts (220) X Amps = Watts Then take: Watts x 3.41214 = Btu/hr
At 240v single phase it's 70.8 amps. If it runs on 2 wires plus ground, take the voltage rating of the equipment and divide that into the watts to get amps. At 480v 3 phase it's 25.8 amps. At 208v 3 phase it's 47.2 amps. <<>> There are zero amps in 14 kW. A voltage needs to be stated. I = W/E, Amps = Watts/Volts.
It depends on the voltage and whether the lamps are actually 40 watts or 40 watt equivalent. Watts / volts = amps