momentum
Nothing. If I is current, V is voltage, and R is resistance, then V=I*R and V*I=P, where P is power.
in the equation p=m x v, the p represents
x/r=v x=vr
To calculate the power (in watts), use the formula P = V x I, where P is power, V is voltage, and I is current. In this case, P = 230V x 1.30A, which equals 299 watts.
When X is 1, regardless of the base p.
P = Cx 'P' = the product 'C' = any integer
111684
5.8
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)
nx - m = p so x = (m+p)/n
x = (P - 2W) / 2