Yes, Electrical supply stores usually carry them
The current will remain in a 220 volt circuit as long as the circuit load remains in the circuit and the circuit remains closed.
While you can physically do this it violates the Electrical Code. 110 Volt and 220 Volt receptacles are required by the Electrical Code to be on separate breakers for safety reasons, this would put them on the same 220 Volt breaker.
Yes, the 265 volts is just the maximum the appliance can handle. You can use it on a 240 volt circuit.
4 AWG copper or 2 AWG aluminum.
Mine was 220 and I suppose they all are.
Wiring to the circuit breakers is 220 volts. The circuit breaker box has 2 110 Volt lines. If you connect two black lines together from one side nothing happens. If the these two black wires are from different circuit breakers you may have a safety issue by back feeding the electricity. If you connect 2 different 110 volt lines you will end up with a short. This ends up as a 220 volt short.
The current will remain in a 220 volt circuit as long as the circuit load remains in the circuit and the circuit remains closed.
The voltage cannot just be increased in a circuit because there is a risk of damage, blown circuit breakers and/or fire. However an appliance desgined to run on 220 v will use 6/11ths of the current used by an identical appliance designed for 120 v.
Can you supply three 220 -240 volt 16.6 amp infrared heaters with one circuit?
While you can physically do this it violates the Electrical Code. 110 Volt and 220 Volt receptacles are required by the Electrical Code to be on separate breakers for safety reasons, this would put them on the same 220 Volt breaker.
NO - that is dangerous.
No. You need to rewire the circuit from the electric panel.
# 3 gauge
These are two completelydifferent systems and are incompatible with each other. Right from the manufacturer's specifications of the breakers down to the physical size of the electrical panels the breakers fit into.
No. The capacitor will short out and possibly explode. On the other hand, the 440 Volt Cap can be used in a 220 Volt circuit.
With a 12 volt battery charger that is made to plug into a 220 volt circuit.
Yes, the 265 volts is just the maximum the appliance can handle. You can use it on a 240 volt circuit.