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From what I remember from the distant past lectures on power
electronics (which is shakey so could be confused); VA is volt-amps (K is thousands of the same). While watts is amps * volts for DC circuits and resistive AC circuits this does not hold for capacitance or inductance circuits (most real applications). Capacitance or inductance result in the AC current being out of phase with the AC voltage. This results in the power dissipated by the circuit being reduced by a factor (called the power factor). Usually transformers or AC power supplies have VA ratings. For any given circuit the power that can be drawn in watts is less than the VA rating of the supply depending on the load presented by the circuit. No doubt I have something confused here but it gives you the gist of what VA is about. Steve Grant wrote: What is VA and KVA and how or would it relate to max output amperage of a electrical device? |
#2
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What is VA and KVA?
What is VA and KVA and how or would it relate to max output amperage of a
electrical device? |
#3
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"Grant" wrote in news:0w8qd.128939$cJ3.114627@fed1read06:
What is VA and KVA and how or would it relate to max output amperage of a electrical device? VA is Volt-Ampere, if talking DC, VA is the same as Watt, on AC there is a phase angle to factor in. KVA is kilo VA (1000 VA). -- Venlig hilsen, Søren * If it puzzles you dear... Reverse engineer * LM317-PSU-Designer v1,0b http://www.ElektronikTeknolog.dk/cgi-bin/LM317/ |
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