Volts and amps measure two different things. Volts are used to measure potential difference. Amperes (amps for short) are used to measure current. Compare it to a garden hosepipe: Voltage corresponds to the pressure of the water, current measures how fast the water flows.
2000 millivolts equals two volts. For comparison, a single AA cell gives 1.5 volts.
1000 amps is several times the current used by the average household. A regular AA cell can provide, at maximum, about half an amp.
Amps can not give you a kilowatt with out a voltage being applied to the question. Watts = Amps x Volts. Amps = 1000/ Volts.
1 kW = 1000 watts. Formula is Watts = Amps x Volts. As you can see to give you a answer I need a value for volts. Transpose the formula to read I = 1000/volts.
Could be zero, could be 1000 amps. Amps are not the same thing as volts.
1000 /240 = 4.17
Watts are amps times volts, so w/o the volts there's no way of telling.
Amps is a measurement of current. Watts (or kilowatts) is a measure of power. To get the power from the current, you have to know the electrical potential or volts used to produce the current. Amps × Volts = Watts (or Current × Electrical Potential = Power). Incidentally, a kilowatt is 1000 watts, so you'll have to divide your answer by 1000. e.g. if your volts is 40, then 25 amps × 40 volts = 1000 watts. 1000 watts (divided by 1000) is 1kw or kilowatt.
Amps * volts / 1000
a 1.5 kVa source of electrical power has the capacity to supply 100 volts at 15 amps, 300 volts at 5 amps, or 1000 volts at 1.5 amps.
The equation you are looking for is Amps = Watts/Volts. To change kW to watts, multiply kW x 1000.
p=vi. 1000/120 = 8.333amps
watts = volts x amps kilowatt = 1000 watts
To calculate the watts, you can use the formula: Watts = Amps x Volts. In this case, 100 amps x 120 volts equals 12,000 watts.