- Anyone unsure how to prepare the electrical supply before installing a UV printer
- Anyone asking “How many kW do I need?” or “How many Amps?”
- Anyone confused by the concepts of voltage, current, and power (V, I, P)
- Anyone planning to install a UV printer in an existing office or workshop
- Anyone trying to determine whether additional electrical work is needed
- Use a dedicated outlet for the printer. Sharing a power strip with other appliances can cause voltage instability and damage the electronics board.
- Check the maximum power capacity of your building first. Running multiple machines simultaneously may exceed the building’s total supply.
- If electrical work is required, always hire a qualified electrician.
- Use separate power strips — one dedicated to the printer, one for the PC.
- Required electrical spec: AC 220V ± 10%, 50/60Hz, approx. 6A, max. 1.3kW
- For comfortable headroom: 2kW (approx. 9A) — more than enough for normal operation
- No heavy-gauge wiring needed — a standard power strip is sufficient (dedicated use only)
- Do not share the outlet with other appliances. Keep the printer on its own dedicated circuit.
I. Electrical Specifications for a Small UV Printer — How to Prepare the Electrical Supply for Your Printer
1. Information from the Nameplate and Brochure
Three pieces of information can be found on the nameplate.
- Rated Voltage : 230V AC
- Rated Input : 6A
- Rated Frequency : 50/60Hz

The product brochure lists the following specifications.

- Voltage and Frequency : AC 220V ± 10%, 50/60Hz
- Required power capacity : (redacted — incorrect information in original)
- Power consumption during operation : Max. 1300W
- Power consumption, Standby mode : Approx. 200W
2. Summary of Required Electrical Specifications
Prepare your electrical supply based on the maximum power consumption.
- Power consumption during operation : Max. 1300W
- P (Power, Watt) = V (Voltage) × I (Current, Amp)
- 1300W = 220V × I → I = 1300W ÷ 220V = approx. 5.9A
- In summary: AC 220V ± 10%, 50/60Hz, approx. 6A, 1.3kW.
- Given that a high-performance desktop PC typically draws 200–500W, 1,300W is not an especially large load.
If you want comfortable headroom, prepare up to 2kW:
- 2000W = 220V × I → I = 2000W ÷ 220V = approx. 9A
- AC 220V ± 10%, 50/60Hz, approx. 9A, 2kW
- This provides more than enough electrical capacity for normal operation.
II. Understanding Voltage, Current, and Power — How to Prepare the Electrical Supply for Your Printer
1. The P=VI Formula Explained Simply
P = V × I
P (Power, Watt) = V (Voltage) × I (Current, Amp)
P — Power (Watt)
- Power represents how much work the electrical energy is doing — how hard it is working at any given moment.
- The unit is Watt (W), and 1,000W = 1kW.
V — Voltage
- 220V is a difference in electrical pressure. One side has 220V of force, the other side has 0V.
- When the two sides are connected by a wire, that pressure difference — 220V — begins to act. This is voltage.
- Without a connection, no current flows and nothing happens.
I — Current (Amp)
- Current is how much of that electrical pressure difference is being delivered — the flow rate of electricity.
- Think of it like water: a wide hose delivers a large volume (high current, high power); a narrow hose delivers less (low current, low power).
- If you need to deliver a lot of power but use a wire that’s too thin, it overheats — just like a hose bursting under too much pressure, or a circuit breaker tripping.
2. Summary Diagram

Here are the most common questions about electrical preparation before installing the printer.
Q. How many kW do I need?
A. The printer requires 1.3kW, but preparing for 2kW gives you comfortable headroom.
- For reference, a high-end desktop computer draws around 0.5kW — so 1.3kW is not a heavy load on its own.
- However, if you’re running multiple machines simultaneously, check the maximum power capacity of your building.
- If the combined load of all your equipment exceeds the building’s supply, you’ll need an electrician to expand the capacity.
Q. How many Amps do I need?
A. Once you know the kW, the Amp figure takes care of itself. One dedicated outlet for the printer and a separate power strip for the PC is all you need.
- At 1.3kW, there is no need for heavy-gauge wiring.
- A standard power strip is perfectly adequate.
- However, do not share the outlet with other appliances. Keep the printer on a dedicated circuit.
III. ARTJET UV Printer

