Depends on the voltage output, in a 12 Volt system 12.5 Amps equals 150 Watts, the equation is, (Amps x Volts)= Watts
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12.5 amps is zero watts. Watts is the product of amps x volts. Without the voltage value an answer can not be given.
You have to provide me with the voltage to enable me tabulate and compute this correctly since power=current x voltage.
1000 milliamperes = 1 amp. Assuming a resistive load, amps = watts / volts = .125 amps or 125 milliamperes
watts = amps (times) voltage watts (divided by) voltage = amps 140 (div by) 120 = 1.66 140 (div by) 125 = 1.12
watts = volts * amps--> Amps = watts/ volts therefore; 2000/220= 9.09 amps
9000 watts is zero amps. Amps are the product of amps times volts. Without a voltage stated an answer can not be given. I = W/E, Amps = Watts/Volts.
Watts = Volts * Amps Therefore: 70 Watts / 13.8 Volts = 5.07 Amps
1000 milliamperes = 1 amp. Assuming a resistive load, amps = watts / volts = .125 amps or 125 milliamperes
watts = amps (times) voltage watts (divided by) voltage = amps 140 (div by) 120 = 1.66 140 (div by) 125 = 1.12
watts = volts * amps--> Amps = watts/ volts therefore; 2000/220= 9.09 amps
9000 watts is zero amps. Amps are the product of amps times volts. Without a voltage stated an answer can not be given. I = W/E, Amps = Watts/Volts.
There are zero watts in 730 amps. Watts is the product of amps times volts. As you can see without a voltage no answer can be given.
Watts = Volts * Amps Therefore: 70 Watts / 13.8 Volts = 5.07 Amps
Amps, volts and watts are interrelated, but you need to do a little math. Amps * Volts = Watts
How many Amps is the fridge pulling? Multiply the Amps by the 120V circuit you're plugging into and you'll get your Watts.
I t depends. Watts = Amps times volts. 40 amps x 120 volts =4800 watts or 40 Amps x 12 volts = 480 watts.
These are not convertible quantities. The same way that you cannot convert seconds into pounds. Or pounds into miles per hour. If you reconstituted your question into the form of "I have a device that draws 2 amps at 125 volts, how many Watts is it consuming?" we'd be off to the races. Hope that helps.
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.
Watts is volts times amps, so 12 x 30 = 360 watts