The voltage and an electric heater

AI Thread Summary
A 660W heater operates at 120V, and when the voltage drops to 110V, the power consumption is calculated to be 550W. The current at 660W is determined to be 5.5A, leading to a resistance of 22Ω. With the new voltage, the current is 5A, confirming the power consumption of 550W through two methods. There is a discrepancy with the expected answer of 500W, suggesting a possible misprint in the rated power. The calculations are verified as correct, indicating the problem is resolved.
Karol
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Homework Statement


A 660[W] heater can work on 120[V]. if the voltage decreases to 110[V] what is the power that it consumes?

Homework Equations


$$V=iR$$
$$P=iV$$
For pure resistance: ##P=i^2R##

The Attempt at a Solution


The current at 660[W]: ##P=i\cdot 120\rightarrow i=5.5[A]##
The resistance: ##660=5.5^2\cdot R\rightarrow R=22[\Omega]##
The new current: ##V=iR\rightarrow 110=i\cdot 22\rightarrow i=5[A]##
The new power consumption: ##P=i\cdot V=5\cdot 110=550[W]##
And with another method: ##P=i^2\cdot R=5^2\cdot 22=550[W]##
It is written that it should be 500[W]
 
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Your calculations look fine. The supposed answer is not correct.
 
Thanks, gneil
 
My guess is the rated power should be given as 600W, not 660W.
 
Thank you too, haruspex, but the other partial answers to this question, which i didn't fully copy here, fit 660[W], but i guess this problem is solved
 
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