746 Watts per horsepower / 480 volts x power factor x efficiency x 1.73 = amps assuming that the motor is three phase. 746 x 60 =44760 watts divided by 480 x 1.73 = 53.9 amps ( If the pf and eff. information is not known this will put you in the ball park)
Assuming resistive load, 0.125 amps.
50 kVA is 16.667 kVA per phase and you divide that by the phase voltage. Current = 16667 / 277 = 60 Amps
The formula you are looking for is W = Amps x Volts.
Yes, if you use a 240 volt to 480 volt step up 15 KVA transformer. This will give you 30 amps usable at 480 volts.
Watts, Amps, Volts. The formula is simple: P=VI Power (in watts) equals volts times amps. For example a if a light bulb is powered by 110 volts and produces 60 watts you can determine that 60/110 or about .55 amps is going through the light bulb. 60=110 X 0.55 W = E x I, W = I2 x R, W = E2/R
Assuming resistive load, 0.125 amps.
50 kVA is 16.667 kVA per phase and you divide that by the phase voltage. Current = 16667 / 277 = 60 Amps
The formula you are looking for is W = Amps x Volts.
It's not that simple. The basic formula is Volts / Ohms = Amps. For 30 Volts you'd get 0.5 Amps, for 60 Volts you'd get 1 Amp, for 120 Volts you'd get 2 Amps.
Yes, if you use a 240 volt to 480 volt step up 15 KVA transformer. This will give you 30 amps usable at 480 volts.
It depends on how many Amps (current) are applied to the voltage. Watt = Volts x Amps. e.g. 12 volts @ 5 amps = 60 watts
It's not that simple. The basic formula is Volts / Ohms = Amps. For 30 Volts you'd get 0.5 Amps, for 60 Volts you'd get 1 Amp, for 120 Volts you'd get 2 Amps.
It depends on how many Amps (current) are applied to the voltage. Watt = Volts x Amps. e.g. 12 volts @ 5 amps = 60 watts
Watts, Amps, Volts. The formula is simple: P=VI Power (in watts) equals volts times amps. For example a if a light bulb is powered by 110 volts and produces 60 watts you can determine that 60/110 or about .55 amps is going through the light bulb. 60=110 X 0.55 W = E x I, W = I2 x R, W = E2/R
480 volts and 60ohm impedence current = volt/impedence current=480/60 current=8ampeares
To find the power in watts, multiply the current (5.0 amps) by the voltage (which is needed to provide the full power calculation). Without voltage information, we can't determine the power in watts solely from current (amps).
The current is half an amp because amps times volts equals watts.