Amperes per hour doesn't make sense. Ampere is a unit of current, not of energy. If a device uses a certain amount of amperes, or milliamperes, it will use that current all the time while it is turned on, not "per hour".
Oh, dude, two thirds of an hour is 40 minutes. You could draw a clock and divide it into thirds, but honestly, just trust me on this one. Who needs a diagram when you've got my expert comedic math skills?
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0.0001 amps will stop your heart if you are fully grounded.
you can draw infinite lines
how many envelope can be stuffed in an hour
9000 BTU/hour is equivalent to 2300 watts so the heater will draw 10 amps on 230 volts.
100 amps
23
amps like.. amplifiers? it depends on how many speakers you have. or amps like.. current draw? again. depends on your power needs, your power amps... ect
1100 watts or about ten amps then another 3 to 4 amps for turn table light and fan
Amps for an oven are governed by the total wattage of the oven and what the voltage supply to the oven is.
It is drawing .06 amps.
A dishwasher typically draws around 10-12 amps when in operation.
1 AMP
A deep freezer can draw between 6 to 8 times its running amps on start-up, depending on the model and size of the freezer. For example, if a freezer runs at 6 amps, it could draw between 36 to 48 amps when starting up.
It would be at least 250 amps, maybe 300 amps.
Each 32-watt bulb in a 48-inch fluorescent light typically draws around 0.27 amps. Therefore, a two-bulb setup would draw approximately 0.54 amps in total.