so that's 110lbs. through 49ft.This is 1 out of the book
A machine lifts a mass of 50kg through a distance of 15 metres in 30 seconds what will the power required be?
answer in ft.lbs. please.
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Discuss Algebra and formulas in the Electrical Course Trainees Only area at ElectriciansForums.net
so that's 110lbs. through 49ft.This is 1 out of the book
A machine lifts a mass of 50kg through a distance of 15 metres in 30 seconds what will the power required be?
This is 1 out of the book
A machine lifts a mass of 50kg through a distance of 15 metres in 30 seconds what will the power required be?
Or a transformer has a 25:1 ratio. If the input voltage is 400v, the output voltage will be?
I'd just like help with the easiest ways to work these out please
Primary/ secondary, input V / output V, input c / output c
400 / 25 = 16. The secondary winding is 16v = a step down transformer.
Advice with 202 though I'd say remember the star / delta formula it's self.
In Delta the formula being Vl=Vp so the voltage is balanced. It's the current that's square root of 3 1.732.
In Star it's the other way around.
Power triangle helps assess the loads and whether ur circuits can handle the loads. P =V/I . A good example is a 700 watt device / 230v supply is 3a so anything over 700 watt you would need a higher amp fuse.
smarrtarse. now you're getting beyond the Electrical Trainee level. careful.you'll have them all asking wtf is power factor.Don't forget that with AC, Power only equal Volts x Amps if the power factor is unity (1). If not then power equals Volts x Amps X power-factor.
Advice with 202 though I'd say remember the star / delta formula it's self.
In Delta the formula being Vl=Vp so the voltage is balanced. It's the current that's square root of 3 1.732.
In Star it's the other way around.
I too have got my principles exam next month C&G 2365 202, been doing lots of revision and always stumble on star/delta formulas, just cannot remember which way round they are.
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