100/220 = .45A or 450 mA
If it is a dual voltage TV, yes.
it is better to turn it off because this wastes less electricity It has been shown that the TV Draws less current left on all day, opposed to turning it on more than 3 times a day. So if you turn it on once or twice a day its fine, if your constantly turning it on and off than you are wasting more energy than if it were left on all day. Your TV has Capacitors and other equipment that must warm up, or be charged with electricity before your TV brings you a full picture. You can hear it everytime you turn the TV on. During the initial switching on the TV draws more current to accomplish its task. If left on the TV draws less current until it reaches optimal capacity.
Most televisions run on a standard household current of 120 volts in the United States. Some larger televisions may require more voltage. It is important to check the manufacturer's specifications for the specific voltage requirements of your television.
Led tv.
Is this, intentionally, a trick question?We are dealing with alternating current, here, not direct current. So, if you divide the supply voltage by the current drawn by the television set, you are determining its impedance(Z), not its resistance:Z = V/I = 120/3 = 40 ohmsImpedance is the vector sum of resistance and reactance. As the current is probably being drawn by a transformer, the resistance will be significantly lower than the reactance, perhaps only an ohm or two -if that!So, from the information supplied, you cannot determine the resistance.
Yes. Spain voltage is 220v, English is 240v (which is close enough!) Spain television uses PAL, as does English.
Without knowing how much power your "small TV" draws nor what the electric rates are where you live, there's no way we can answer this. The back of the TV should tell you how much power it nominally draws, and you can get rates by looking at your last electric bill.
It depends on how many amps each TV draws. The continuous load should be 80% of teh breaker or 12 amps. If an average TV draws 2.5 amps that would be 4 TVs. Look for a rating plate on TV and just add the currents up.
The wattage varies on every television and also varies with your settings like brightness and even volume because it takes more power to play louder. The power usage is listed in the user manual of the tv, if you do not have a manual you can get the information from the manufacturers website just make sure you have the model number.
220V 60 Hz will be found between phases of a 3 phase 117V system (like the one used in North America).220V 50 Hz will be found between phase and ground (neutral) in many Europe and countries (though now it has been standardized to 240V 50 Hz).The frequency of the alternating current is a significant difference in many applications but some equipment is not frequency sensitive (tungsten filament light bulbs for example).
Current TV was created in 2005.
Using a power converter, it is quite possible to run a 110V television on a 220V supply. The converter ensures that the television will only see 110V. However, the question implies that a television is being taken from one country to another. If that is the case, television signal standards vary throughout the world and RF tuners vary across the world. Although some televisions offer multi-standard operation, many do not. It is worth doing some extra research on the two countries in question before making a decision to ship a television anywhere.