Wh = V * Ah.
I work for an ebike retailer. Our standard batteries are 36V 10Ah = 360Wh. A 48V 7.5Ah battery would also be 360Wh.
My understanding is that batteries are usually described in Ah because you’ll typically comparing them to other batteries with the same voltages; you can’t use a 48V battery with a 36V system, so if your 360Wh battery turns out to be 48V 7.5Ah instead of 36V 10Ah you’re SOL. But Wh is a more complete description of the amount of electrical energy your battery can hold, or your household’s annual power consumption or whatever.
EDIT: The water analogy is a useful way to understand electrical stuff. Voltage is like water pressure, current (amperes) is like flow rate, charge (ampere-hours or coulombs) is like water volume. Watts are like the amount of power the flowing water supplies (imagine it’s turning a water wheel or something) – pressurised water can supply more power. X Watt-hours are just ‘supply X amount of watts for 1 hour, or 1 watt for X hours’.
Latest Answers