Electrical Power 解説
ワット, ボルト, and Amps
Understand Electrical PowerA 60-watt light bulb, a 15-amp circuit breaker, and a 120-volt outlet—how do these relate? 理解する the relationship between power (watts), voltage (volts), and current (amps) is fundamental to working with electrical systems safely and effectively.
理解する Each Quantity
Voltage (V) - Electrical Pressure
Voltage is the "pressure" that pushes electrons through a circuit. Like water pressure in a pipe.
- US household: 120V (standard), 240V (heavy appliances)
- Europe: 230V
- Batteries: 1.5V, 9V, 12V typical
Current (I, measured in Amps) - Flow Rate
Current is the amount of electrons flowing per second. Like water flow rate.
- Small electronics: milliamps (mA)
- Light bulbs: 0.5-1A
- Appliances: 5-20A
- Electric car charger: 30-50A
Power (P, measured in ワット) - Work Rate
Power is the rate of energy transfer—how much work is being done per second.
- LED bulb: 9-15W
- Laptop: 45-100W
- Microwave: 700-1,200W
- Electric heater: 1,000-2,000W
Power Calculations
Finding Power
P = V × I
Example: Hair dryer on 120V drawing 12A
P = 120 × 12 = 1,440W
Finding Current
I = P / V
Example: How much current does a 1,800W appliance draw on 120V?
I = 1,800 / 120 = 15A
Finding Voltage
V = P / I
Example: A 60W device draws 5A. What voltage?
V = 60 / 5 = 12V
Circuit Capacity
Knowing power helps ensure you don't overload circuits:
| Circuit Breaker | Voltage | Max Power (at 80%) |
|---|---|---|
| 15A | 120V | 1,440W |
| 20A | 120V | 1,920W |
| 30A | 240V | 5,760W |
| 50A | 240V | 9,600W |
The 80% rule: Don't continuously load circuits beyond 80% of their rating.
AC vs DC Power
DC (Direct Current)
Batteries, solar panels, electronics. Power is simply V × I.
AC (Alternating Current)
Household outlets. Power calculations are more complex due to phase relationships:
- Apparent power (VA): V × I
- Real power (W): V × I × power factor
- Power factor: 0 to 1 (1 for resistive loads like heaters)
For resistive loads (heaters, incandescent bulbs), power factor ≈ 1, so W ≈ VA.
Common Appliance Power
| Appliance | ワット | Amps (at 120V) |
|---|---|---|
| LED light bulb | 9-15 | 0.08-0.13 |
| Laptop | 45-100 | 0.4-0.8 |
| TV (LED, 55") | 80-120 | 0.7-1.0 |
| Refrigerator | 100-400 | 0.8-3.3 |
| Vacuum cleaner | 500-1,500 | 4-12.5 |
| Microwave | 700-1,200 | 6-10 |
| Hair dryer | 1,000-1,800 | 8-15 |
| Space heater | 1,000-1,500 | 8-12.5 |
| Electric oven | 2,000-5,000 | 17-42 (240V) |
まとめ
Electrical power (watts) equals voltage times current (W = V × I). 理解する this relationship helps you calculate circuit loads, choose appropriate wiring, and avoid overloading circuits. Most US household circuits are 15A or 20A at 120V, limiting continuous loads to about 1,440W or 1,920W respectively. Always respect these limits for safety.