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.
Depends on power factor, but it should be about 8 Amps.
There is one part of the question missing. To find an answer the kW of the heater must be stated. Then the equations used are, to change kW to watts, Kw/1000 = watts. Once that is found then use, I = W/E, Amps = Watts/Volts. This will give you the value in amperage of the heater.
kV is kilovolts, kW is kilowatts, kVA is kilovolt amps and kVAR is kilovolt-amps reactive. A common formula is kVA-squared = kW-squared + kVAR-squared.
There are zero amps in 32 kWh. Watts are the product of amps times volts. Without stating what the voltage is, this calculation can not be made. I = W/E is the formula to find amperage but there has to be a time constant if kWh is used. Usually the question is asked as to how many amps are in 32 kW.
The equation you are looking for is Amps = Watts/Volts. To change kW to watts, multiply kW x 1000.
There are zero kW in 32 amps. Watts are the product of amps times volts. Once you find the voltage of the system multiply it times 32 amps and then divide that answer by 1000. This will give you the answer in kW.
Depends on the voltage. Watts are volts x amps.
To convert kilowatts to amps, you can use the formula: Amps = (kW * 1000) / Voltage. Assuming a standard voltage of 120V (for residential applications), the calculation would be: Amps = (8.5 kW * 1000) / 120V = 70.83A. So, 8.5 kW would be approximately 70.83 amps at 120V.
Current in 200kw at 480 volts = 200,000/480 = 416.667 amps
Amps can not give you a kilowatt with out a voltage being applied to the question. Watts = Amps x Volts. Amps = 1000/ Volts.
Wattage- or kilowattage- is volts time amps. Without knowing the voltage, we cannot answer your questions.
UK Mains is 230V therefore 6 KW is 6000/230 = 26 Amps. 3 phase is slightly different....... 6000/400V = 15 Amps/root 3 = 8.67 Amps per phase.
To convert 15 amps at 415 volts to kilowatts, use the formula: kW = (amps x volts) / 1000. So, kW = (15 A x 415 V) / 1000 = 6.225 kW.
Depends on the voltage.
12 kilowatts is an amount of power that is the voltage times the current in amps. So 12 kilowatts could be provided by 100 volts at 120 amps, or 1000 volts at 12 amps. Equipment is designed to work at a standard voltage, then the current taken is enough for the amount of power it uses.
To calculate the amperage, use the formula: Amps = Power (kW) / (Voltage (V) * 1.73), where 1.73 is the square root of 3. In this case, the amperage would be 130 kW / (480 V * 1.73) ≈ 158.6 Amps.