What Is the Resistance and Power for 100V and 6A?
Using Ohm's Law: 100V at 6A means 16.67 ohms of resistance and 600 watts of power. This is useful for sizing resistors, understanding circuit behavior, and verifying that components can handle the power dissipation (600W in this case).
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Formulas & Step-by-Step
Resistance
R = V ÷ I
Power
P = V × I
Verification (alternative formulas)
P = I² × R
P = V² ÷ R
Circuit Analysis
Heat Dissipation
This circuit dissipates 600 watts of power as heat. In a resistor, all electrical energy at steady state converts to thermal energy. The actual component power rating needs headroom above this steady-state figure, but the specific derating depends on resistor type (carbon-comp, metal-film, wirewound each behave differently), ambient temperature, airflow or heat-sinking, and whether the load is continuous or pulsed. Check the resistor datasheet for the manufacturer-specific derating curve rather than applying a blanket margin.
If You Change the Resistance
| Resistance | Current | Power | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| 8.33 Ω | 12 A | 1,200 W | Lower R = more current |
| 12.5 Ω | 8 A | 800 W | Lower R = more current |
| 16.67 Ω | 6 A | 600 W | Current |
| 25 Ω | 4 A | 400 W | Higher R = less current |
| 33.33 Ω | 3 A | 300 W | Higher R = less current |
Same Resistance at Different Voltages
Holding the resistance constant at 16.67Ω, here is how current and power scale with source voltage. This is a reference table, not a set of separate circuit scenarios: each row is the same resistor under a different applied voltage.
| Voltage | Current (at 16.67Ω) | Power |
|---|---|---|
| 5V | 0.3 A | 1.5 W |
| 12V | 0.72 A | 8.64 W |
| 24V | 1.44 A | 34.56 W |
| 48V | 2.88 A | 138.24 W |
| 120V | 7.2 A | 864 W |
| 208V | 12.48 A | 2,595.84 W |
| 230V | 13.8 A | 3,174 W |
| 240V | 14.4 A | 3,456 W |
| 480V | 28.8 A | 13,824 W |