You multiply volts by amps to get watts. What are your amps?
The watts means nothing without the voltage.
Watts = Amps x Volts. Amps = Watts/Voltage. Amps = 2500/apply voltage here.
Using the equation Volts X Amps = Watts, you can take 3000 watts / Volts to get your answer: 3000W/240V = 12.5A or 3000W/120V = 25A So, at 240 volts you will use 12.5 amps for 3000 watts of power. Or at 120 volts you will use 25 watts.
watts = amps (times) voltage watts (divided by) voltage = amps 140 (div by) 120 = 1.66 140 (div by) 125 = 1.12
Depends on the voltage output, in a 12 Volt system 12.5 Amps equals 150 Watts, the equation is, (Amps x Volts)= Watts <<>> 12.5 amps is zero watts. Watts is the product of amps x volts. Without the voltage value an answer can not be given.
600 This depends on the voltage Voltage x Amps = Watts ex. At 120 volts 5 amps WILL BE 600 watts But at 110 Volts (Some house voltage), it will be 550 watts And at 277 Volt (commercial-Industrial Voltage), it would be 1385 Watts If you know Watts (Like a 75w Incandescent Lamp) and the Voltage: Watts / Volts = Amps So 75w / 120v = 0.625a The last would be Watts / Amps = Volts 600w / 5a = 120v
72 watts
The watts means nothing without the voltage.
Watts is voltage (in volts) x current (in amps)
Watts = Amps x Volts. Amps = Watts/Voltage. Amps = 2500/apply voltage here.
watts
Using the equation Volts X Amps = Watts, you can take 3000 watts / Volts to get your answer: 3000W/240V = 12.5A or 3000W/120V = 25A So, at 240 volts you will use 12.5 amps for 3000 watts of power. Or at 120 volts you will use 25 watts.
watts = amps (times) voltage watts (divided by) voltage = amps 140 (div by) 120 = 1.66 140 (div by) 125 = 1.12
Depends on the voltage output, in a 12 Volt system 12.5 Amps equals 150 Watts, the equation is, (Amps x Volts)= Watts <<>> 12.5 amps is zero watts. Watts is the product of amps x volts. Without the voltage value an answer can not be given.
In general, multiply the (rms) current by the (rms) voltage to get the power. If the voltage to the appliance is 120 Volts, then the power of 4.2 Amps is 504 Watts. If the voltage is 240 Volts, then 1008 Watts. Note: To be technically accurate, you must also multiply the cosine of the phase-angle between current and voltage. For any typical appliance, this is 1 and can be ignored. <<>> There are zero watts in 4.2 amps. Watts = Amps x Volts. Without a voltage stated the wattage can not be calculated.
Watts = Voltage X Amperes X Power Factor Power Factor = Cosine of the Angle between Voltage and Current For purely resistive circuits, Power in Watts = Voltage X Amperes Watts divided by 1000 = kiloWatts
It depends on the supply voltage watts = current in amps times the supply voltage