Calculator inputs
Choose a mode, enter RMS values, select power factor or phase angle, then calculate watts, VA, VAR, impedance parts, energy, and totals.
Plotly graph
The chart compares real, apparent, reactive, and total real power from the current calculation.
Example data table
These examples show how different impedance and phase conditions change current and useful watts.
| Case | Voltage (V) | Impedance (Ω) | Power Factor | Current (A) | Real Power (W) | Apparent Power (VA) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8 Ω speaker load | 28.3 | 8.0 | 1.00 | 3.5375 | 100.09 | 100.09 |
| 120 V motor branch | 120 | 24 | 0.82 | 5.0000 | 492.00 | 600.00 |
| 230 V fan circuit | 230 | 46 | 0.91 | 5.0000 | 1046.50 | 1150.00 |
| 48 V audio amp channel | 48 | 4 | 0.96 | 12.0000 | 552.96 | 576.00 |
Formula used
I = V / Z Z = V / I S = V × I P = S × pf Q = S × sin(φ) R = Z × pf X = Z × sin(φ) Energy (kWh) = Total Watts × Hours ÷ 1000Use RMS voltage and RMS current for AC calculations. The calculator treats positive phase angles as lagging and negative phase angles as leading.
Real power is the useful watt value. Apparent power is the total volt-amp demand. Reactive power reflects stored and released energy from inductive or capacitive behavior.
How to use this calculator
- Select the input mode that matches your known values.
- Enter RMS voltage, current, or impedance as required.
- Choose either power factor or phase angle input.
- Set channels for identical loads running in parallel.
- Add daily operating hours for energy estimation.
- Press the calculate button to show results above the form.
- Review watts, VA, VAR, R, X, and total energy outputs.
- Use the CSV or PDF buttons to export the result summary.
Frequently asked questions
1) What does an impedance watts calculator measure?
It estimates current, real power, apparent power, and reactive power from AC circuit inputs. It also breaks impedance into resistance and reactance so you can understand why watt output changes.
2) What is the difference between watts and VA?
Watts are useful real power. VA is apparent power, the total RMS demand seen by the source. When power factor is below one, watts will be lower than VA.
3) Why does power factor matter?
Power factor shows how effectively apparent power becomes useful work. Lower power factor means more current for the same watts, which can increase heating, losses, and source sizing requirements.
4) Can I use this for speakers and amplifiers?
Yes, for RMS-based estimates. Enter amplifier output voltage and speaker impedance to estimate current and watts. Real audio loads vary with frequency, so exact live values can differ from a single fixed impedance calculation.
5) Why can reactive power be negative?
Negative reactive power usually represents a leading phase angle, common with capacitive behavior. Positive reactive power usually represents lagging phase angle, common with inductive loads.
6) Does lower impedance always increase watts?
With the same RMS voltage, lower impedance increases current and apparent power. Real watts also rise if power factor stays similar. Always verify equipment ratings before operating lower-impedance loads.
7) Should I enter RMS or peak values?
Enter RMS values. AC power formulas for watts, VA, and impedance normally use RMS voltage and current. The calculator also reports peak values after solving the RMS quantities.
8) How do channels affect the totals?
Channels multiply the per-load result by the number of identical parallel loads or amplifier channels. Total watts, total VA, total VAR, and energy use scale directly with the selected count.