Volts Amps Watts explained | Watts vs Volts vs Amps | Amps volts watts explained

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  • Опубликовано: 13 янв 2024
  • Welcome to this enlightening video on the fundamental concepts of electricity - volt, ampere, watt, and ohm! Join us as we explore these key players in the world of electricity using a simple syringe model. Learn how to use electrical energy efficiently and keep your electricity bills in check by understanding the basics.
    In this video, we'll delve into the syringe analogy to explain voltage, current, resistance, and power. Voltage, acting as electrical pressure, propels electric charges through a conductor. Current, measured in amperes, is the flow of charges through a wire. Resistance, measured in ohms, determines how much a material opposes the flow of electricity. Power, measured in watts, represents the amount of work done by electrical energy in a given time.
    Discover how the interplay between these concepts influences energy consumption in your home. Find out why appliances like irons and light bulbs consume different amounts of energy due to variations in resistance. Gain valuable insights into making informed decisions when selecting appliances for your home.
    Watch till the end for a clear understanding of volt, ampere, watt, and ohm, and how they impact your daily electricity usage.
    Links of the related videos.
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    If you have any of the following questions in your mind then this video is helpful for you.
    What is volt and watt and amp. What is volt and ohm. What is 1 ampere volt ohm. What is the formula for volt amp watts. What is volt & watt. What is amp vs volt vs ohm. Are ohms and watts the same. What is amps vs volts vs watts. How electricity bill is calculated. What is the formula to calculate bill. How do I calculate my monthly electricity bill. How do you calculate how much electricity. What is 1 unit of electricity. How many kWh is 1 unit. Is 1 unit equal to 1 kWh. How many kWh are in a unit. What is meant by 1 kilowatt-hour. How much is 1 kWh. How much unit is 1 kWh. What is a kilowatt-hour of electricity. How many kWh is 1 unit. Which appliance consumes the most electricity. Who consumes the most electricity. Which device consumes most electricity. What appliance uses the most electricity in a home. What do you mean by watt. What is 1 watt equal to. What is the 1 volt. What is volt & watt. What ampere means. What is 1 amp. What does ohm mean. What is meant by 1 ohm. What is an ohms formula. What causes electric resistance. What is the formula for electrical resistance. How do you define voltage. What is voltage and current. What do you mean by watt. What is unit of electrical power. what are 1 Volt 1 Watt 1 Ampere 1 Ohm and 1 kWh. What are ampere Volt Watt. What is ampere and voltage.
    Attributions : Picture used for showing electricity bill consumption is downloaded from freepik. Link is given below.
    a href="www.freepik.com/free-vector/p..." Image by macrovector_official/a on Freepik
    #ElectricalEducation #EnergyAwareness #SyringeAnalogy #ElectricityExplained #HomeEnergyConsumption #WattageWisdom #OhmsLaw #AmpereInsights #VoltageConcepts #PowerfulLearning #EnergySavingsTips #Electricity101 #SmartHomeEnergy

Комментарии • 85

  • @kurt773
    @kurt773 Месяц назад +29

    The picture alone is enough to understand electricity😊

  • @ShivaKumarSatakuri
    @ShivaKumarSatakuri 23 дня назад +5

    I haven't watched the video, I'm here just to appreciate the thumbnail as it is pretty much self explanatory.

  • @guerreroaguila9518
    @guerreroaguila9518 12 дней назад +3

    If you translate the video into Spanish, the Latin and Iberian communities will be very happy and grateful to you. Great Job

  • @danalaniz7314
    @danalaniz7314 6 дней назад +3

    Excellent explanation. Thank you.

  • @sliderule5891
    @sliderule5891 11 дней назад +3

    Finally a way of understanding this subject in a manner I can remember and use. Thank you Jan. Excellent work. I’m going to watch this with my granddaughter. I would love for her to become interested in science.
    You ask for possible new topics. How about some visuals to help people to reason logically and defeat lies, misinformation, and propaganda. Basic logical concepts. There is so much nonsense on social media people end up believing in things that are not true. Critical reasoning skills are grossly deficient in this country. Again, thank you for your awesome work.

  • @daves2624
    @daves2624 5 дней назад +2

    Standard electrical outlets in average wired North American house do not generally supply 230 Volts as pictured.
    Usually this outlet is wired to a single 115-120 Volt / 15 Amp circuit and the available current is shared between the two female inserts. If the combined load of the two devices connected exceeds the supply current (Volts × Amps = Watts -- or -- 120 Volts ×15 Amps = 1,800 Watts) a circuit breaker or fuse will cut the supply current.
    In some rooms (kitchen), the outlet may be wired to two separate 115-120 Volt / 15 Amp circuits allowing two high electrical usage appliances (kettle and toaster) to operate simultaneously from the outlet without activating breaker or fuse (called a "split" outlet). Important to remember is that there are two separate circuits in this setup. If a breaker/fuse is activated in one circuit (say kettle) the second circuit (say toaster) may still be live/hot.
    Some household outlets may provide greater Volts and/or Amps and will differ physically from standard outlets, but the standard 2 or 3 prong plug will not insert into them.

    • @jul1440
      @jul1440 3 дня назад

      Even _if_ they meant the line feed for a home, the feed is usually 240, not 230, before it is split into 120. Most appliances in North America will run at all of these voltages. My outlets test at 126.

  • @JOATMOFA
    @JOATMOFA 16 дней назад +4

    "A picture tells a thousand words."
    Your thumbnail is enough to train a million electricians! (I know because I am one!)

  • @mannabuharikambai6524
    @mannabuharikambai6524 4 дня назад +2

    Good video I must say and the visual thumbnail and audio commentary is really great

  • @natechisley
    @natechisley День назад +1

    This is great! Thank you!

  • @Anishtheories
    @Anishtheories 4 месяца назад +5

    A Different approach to understanding basic doubt in electrical terms

  • @pn4960
    @pn4960 День назад +1

    This is excellent

  • @shadowpapito
    @shadowpapito 2 месяца назад +6

    Excellent

  • @ChandrashekharChowdhury
    @ChandrashekharChowdhury 3 дня назад +1

    EXCELLENT

  • @olinaconkova5740
    @olinaconkova5740 Месяц назад +3

    Exellent video

  • @Ismailkhan-iy4tw
    @Ismailkhan-iy4tw Месяц назад +2

    Really great explanation

  • @EmmanuelMatabaro
    @EmmanuelMatabaro 23 дня назад +2

    Awesome!

  • @arashyusefi1889
    @arashyusefi1889 День назад +1

    Thanks 👍😊🙏💯

  • @omishagunasekar7780
    @omishagunasekar7780 Месяц назад +2

    Amazing! It helped me so much!

  • @abuharib8261
    @abuharib8261 15 дней назад +1

    v nice....v v nice......i m 57...got this straight now!! why don't they teach like this at school...or even college??...shows our education is such a failure!

  • @joee7626
    @joee7626 2 месяца назад +4

    GREAT explanation; clear and concise information with examples given, but without overexplaining.

  • @techtimes1985
    @techtimes1985 4 месяца назад +4

    Excellent video, everything was so meticulous and to the point I couldn't take my eyes off the video even for a second ❤.

  • @initiallearnwithme
    @initiallearnwithme Месяц назад +2

    Useful for students

  • @senthilkumarsenthil832
    @senthilkumarsenthil832 8 дней назад +1

    Really thanks

  • @kuchanasiddhartha5994
    @kuchanasiddhartha5994 7 дней назад +1

    The Thumbnail is enough to understand electricity 🔌...

  • @vevasam
    @vevasam Месяц назад +2

    In your thumbnail you could even show the blue juice in syringe as Charge.

  • @lockercoin3693
    @lockercoin3693 13 дней назад +1

    excellent video! you sir just got a new subscriber

  • @theindian293
    @theindian293 9 дней назад +1

    The the the the the most beautiful way explaination done salute to the concept n video format.....

  • @eugeniopacellidinizleite320
    @eugeniopacellidinizleite320 Месяц назад +1

    Muito bem feito. Goste!

  • @besigyehenry7616
    @besigyehenry7616 28 дней назад +1

    Thank you so much 5:33

  • @justinkane290
    @justinkane290 Месяц назад +1

    Awesome I can do circuit analysis with Bernoulli’s now.

  • @catman8965
    @catman8965 Месяц назад +3

    EXCELLENT MODEL!!!

  • @BurRun-kt3tf
    @BurRun-kt3tf 17 дней назад +1

    Thanks អរគុណ❤

  • @josebuenfil7559
    @josebuenfil7559 Месяц назад +1

    Gracias

  • @radiosantigos1894
    @radiosantigos1894 11 дней назад +1

    Very nice explanation. But I think that the flow of the current of the battery in reality is the reverse. The electrons are leaving the battery from the negative side, or not?

    • @Janvisualphysics
      @Janvisualphysics  11 дней назад

      Yes electrons leave the battery at the negative end. Conventional current is opposite to this, which is the flow of positive charge from positive terminal.

  • @PravdaSeed
    @PravdaSeed 2 месяца назад +3

    🔋🧞🔋 thanks 💯..

  • @hawzhinothman6062
    @hawzhinothman6062 22 дня назад +1

    Thank you for creating this great video, in fact I am wondering to know is electron actually flow through the wire and generate electricity or actually electron is only vibrate and the electric field transfer the energy around the wire?.

    • @Janvisualphysics
      @Janvisualphysics  22 дня назад

      Watch the following video to clear your concepts about electric current. ruclips.net/video/J8qVLb3a35s/видео.html

  • @user-hp4rn9yl2d
    @user-hp4rn9yl2d Месяц назад +1

    I like it excelent

  • @EXPLORADVEN
    @EXPLORADVEN 29 дней назад +1

    👌👌👌❤️❤️❤️👌👌👌

  • @ef7480
    @ef7480 14 дней назад +1

    Love the 'only way is essex' AI...

  • @naumansindhu
    @naumansindhu 29 дней назад +2

    More famous u become more trouble you get from jealous people. Always have backup plan.

  • @danielndungu7543
    @danielndungu7543 9 дней назад +1

    I need more vidieos

  • @afentex
    @afentex Месяц назад

    can you explain why Overload of Ampere even low volt like only 1.5v cause the wire heat up and burned?

    • @deang5622
      @deang5622 7 дней назад

      Because the voltage does not cause the wire to heat up. It is the current that does.
      The higher the current the hotter the wire is going to become.

  • @hamidjarchi8924
    @hamidjarchi8924 6 дней назад +1

    Don't you know current is from negative pole to positive???

    • @Janvisualphysics
      @Janvisualphysics  6 дней назад

      Electronic current flows from negative to positive terminal, while conventional current flows from positive to negative terminal.

  • @aliozugur9647
    @aliozugur9647 25 дней назад +1

    🇹🇷

  • @DennisDelaney-fg4pw
    @DennisDelaney-fg4pw 11 дней назад +1

    The same laws that explain hydraulics explain electricity .

    • @stas4017
      @stas4017 7 дней назад

      this analogy doesn't go far, so no, not really

    • @DennisDelaney-fg4pw
      @DennisDelaney-fg4pw 7 дней назад

      @@stas4017 when I was in high school that’s how it was taught people understood hydraulic laws so just changing the names explained electricity it is exactly the same, down to PIE.

    • @stas4017
      @stas4017 7 дней назад

      @@DennisDelaney-fg4pw what laws, for example?

    • @stas4017
      @stas4017 7 дней назад

      @@DennisDelaney-fg4pw i teach Russian team for IPhO and i've never heard of any analogy between the two. I had golden medal on IPhO myself when i was at school, too. Electric current (A) is proportional to voltage (V), but water current (kg/s) isn't proportional to pressure (Pa), it's proportional to square root of pressure. So what laws are you talking about, exactly?

    • @DennisDelaney-fg4pw
      @DennisDelaney-fg4pw 7 дней назад

      @@stas4017 PIE for example if you don’t know PIE your not qualified to ask.

  • @patty1991
    @patty1991 Месяц назад +1

    P = u*i

  • @lowandslow3939
    @lowandslow3939 Месяц назад

    You showed a 120 volt receptacle while speaking of 220 volt household circuits and showed contacters instead of circuit breakers.

  • @shakilscreativezone
    @shakilscreativezone Месяц назад

    বুঝি না 😢

  • @AkPK369
    @AkPK369 Месяц назад

    Volt ohm wat are same

  • @paxaeterna8341
    @paxaeterna8341 7 дней назад +1

    Annoying robo voice.

  • @michaelcraft2664
    @michaelcraft2664 10 дней назад

    Wow, so much wrong here! It's no wonder why so many people have a hard time understanding electricity.

    • @thefanboy3285
      @thefanboy3285 4 часа назад

      Explain or provide a better, accessible source.

  • @bonggojbihonggo991
    @bonggojbihonggo991 8 дней назад +1

    👌👌🇧🇩

  • @Moneybitch000
    @Moneybitch000 2 месяца назад +2

    Good explaining but can you change the bot voice

  • @AMOLPATIL-wl6mc
    @AMOLPATIL-wl6mc 10 дней назад +1

    Excellent explanation. Thank you.