Voltage, measured in volts. <><><> This question is derived from the fundamental relationship between electrical components which is known as Ohms Law: V = I x R
where V = voltage (Volts), I = current (Amps) and R= resistance (Ohms).
Watts = Amps x Volts for a resistive load. It is sometimes denoted as volt-amperes or VA.
Ohm's Law
Volts = Amps x Resistance
Often written V = I x R
Watts
It's watts divided by volts equals amps. Example: 1200 watts at 120 volts is 10 amps. To get the watts if you know the amps, multiply the amps times the volts. 10 amps at 120 volts is 1200 watts.
There are no "watts" in 2.5 volts. Wattage is the result when you multiply volts times amps. You cannot answer the question with only one quantity (in this case 2.5 volts). If you have 1 amp and 2.5 volts, they you would have 2.5 watts. If you had 2 amps and 2.5 volts, they you would have 5 watts. The formula is Volts X Amps = Watts.
You multiply volts by amps to get watts. What are your amps?
When you multiply amps x volts the product is watts. Using this formula W = Amps x Volts should give you your answer.
Watts is volts times amps, so 12 x 30 = 360 watts
Amps are units of current, watts are units of power. Watts are the product of Amps times Volts. Watts = Amps x Volts.
Volts. Using the equation V=IR Change in voltage (measured in volts) = Current (in Amps) * Resistance (in ohms) So a volt equals amps times ohms.
Multiply the amps by the volts and the answer is the VA
Volts times amps.
It's watts divided by volts equals amps. Example: 1200 watts at 120 volts is 10 amps. To get the watts if you know the amps, multiply the amps times the volts. 10 amps at 120 volts is 1200 watts.
Ohms law will tell you watts equals volts times amps: 115 x 5 = 575
No.By which I mean: amps and watts are not just different units, they're different TYPES of units. You can't convert amps to watts without knowing the voltage (if you DO know the voltage, multiply volts by amps to get watts).
Multiply the amperage times the volts. This will give you the wattage. There are 2 formulas that are, together, considered Ohm's Law. They are: E(volts) equals I(amps) times R(resistance), and P(power, or watts) equals I(amps) times E(volts), which is what is stated above. From these two formulas and with the application of algebraic manipulation you get a total of 12 equations that can be used to determine most answers to technical electrical questions.
That depends on what units you use as input. If you put in current in Amps and Resistance in Ohms you will get voltage in Volts.AnswerCurrent is measured in amperes. Resistance is measured in ohms, which is a special name given to a volt per ampere. Multiply amperes by (volts per ohm), and you are left with volts.
There are no "watts" in 2.5 volts. Wattage is the result when you multiply volts times amps. You cannot answer the question with only one quantity (in this case 2.5 volts). If you have 1 amp and 2.5 volts, they you would have 2.5 watts. If you had 2 amps and 2.5 volts, they you would have 5 watts. The formula is Volts X Amps = Watts.
You multiply volts by amps to get watts. What are your amps?
Get the volts and multiply that by the amps. This will give you the watts.