The question you pose doesn't make a lot of sense. An RPM is a unit of rotation and an amp is unit of electrical current. You can't convert these units just willy-nilly. Now if you were wondering about the correlation of RPMs in an electrical dynamo and the current produced, that would make more sense... I'm just not sure what you're asking.
Using an alternator.
You don't. The units measure different things.
Wire Sizing Amps
The prefix 'micro' means, one millionth. So there are one million micro amps in one amp
Electrical power = current x voltage Current is in amps
You have to know the power loading and phase angle (or power factor) between each pairh of the phases, otherwise you could be making serious errors.
You cannot, the terms are incompatable.
4.3 amps
Amps is amps be it DC or AC.
voltage is measured in terms of volts ; current is measured in terms of amps.........................................
You cannot in any sensible way. RPM is a measure of (angular) velocity whereas litres is a measure of volume. Your hard disk will have an rpm but what does litres mean in terms of the disk?
Watts are the product of amps x volts.
all you have to do is convert it..........
The electrical equivalent to torque is AMPS. Power in Electricity is Volts * Amps Where in a rotating shaft its RPM * Torque
122 cubic feet to rpm??
Amps and volts are two separate parts of power measurement and do not convert into each other. Multiplying amps times volts will give you the measurement of wattage.
To convert amps into watts a voltage is needed. Watts = Amps x Volts.
watts = volts x amps kilowatt = 1000 watts