A welding machine rated at 500 amperes uses around 120000 watts of power. This is used in very heavy industrial applications due to its large power draw.
48
40-45v
Standard welder sizes are between 5 to 500 kilovolt amperes, but micro spot welders may be as small as 1.5 kilovolt amperes. They are used in many types of industries which require precision welding.
primary winding and secondary winding how this turn.
If you are talking DC voltage: 1 billion volts at 10 nano amperes is 10 watts. 1 million volts at 10 micro amperes is 10 watts. 1 thousand volts at 10 milli amperes is 10 watts. 1 volt at 10 amperes is 10 watts. So, it depends. You're comparing power to potential, which cannot be directly compared without more information (the amperage).
2 basic types, Gas shielding, and flux shielding. Gas shielding comes from compressed tanks of inert gas such as argon. these gases are pumped through the welding hose and over the weld pool. The flux type protects the weld by covering it in a layer of slag that prevent it from being contaminated by the surrounding air.
For the same power - Watts - you need to run twice as many amps at 220V than at 440V. For the same load, it'll pull half the amps at 220V than it did on 440V
It depends on how many amperes there are. If you have 1 amperes, then you get 260 watts. If you have 260 amperes, then you have 67,600 watts. If you have 0.001 amperes, then you have 0.26 watts. Its just watts = volts times amperes. Of course, the limiting factor is the available power behind the 260 volts, but you did not say anything about that.
Watts = volts x amperes. So if your region uses 110 volts, 20 amperes is equivalent to 2200 watts; if your region uses 220 volts, 20 amperes is equivalent to 4400 watts.
8.6 amps is zero watts without a voltage.
Amps, volts and watts are interrelated, but you need to do a little math. Amps * Volts = Watts
14.4 watts
Answer depends on voltage being used. Volts x amps = watts 1000 watts = 1Kw You have 200 amp welder. Assuming you have 240volt power line to welder: 240Volts x 200amps = 4800 watts = 4.8Kw
There is not enough information to answer your question directly... In order to determine how many volts it takes to make 4000 watts, you also need to know how many amperes there are. That is because watts is volts times amperes. For example, if you had a 120V system, you could divide 4000 watts by 120 volts to get 33 1/3 amperes.
144 watts <<>> The formula to find watts is W = A x V. Watts =Amps x Volts.
10000 watts / 220 volts = 45.4545 amperes
The formula you are looking for is I = W (VA)/E. Amps = Watts/ Volts.
Probably that varies from one manufacturer to another; it should be somewhere in the range of 50-100 watts. There should be a sticker on the back of your monitor that tells the electrical specifications, including how much watts it uses. If the sticker doesn't mention watts, it should mention volts and amperes. In this case, if you multiply volts x amperes, you get watts.
I am not sure, but you can look at the back of your TV set. Most electrical equipment has its specifications there - if it doesn't state the watts, you can multiply amperes x volts.