NO - that is dangerous.
This is the way to get digital signals in a computer. You just need to decide on two different voltage values which the electrical circuit can tell apart easily. 0 volts is an obvious choice for zero, and 5 volts is about right to work in that kind of circuit. (For one thing, if it were 100 volts, you could electrocute yourself on your computer!)
One has an element designed to work on 120 volts, the other has an element designed to work on 240 volts.
It should work okay.
well it kinda says in the name TWELVE volt battery so it kinda takes TWELVE volts to work correctly
No, 12 volts means 12 volts. Anything less will not work and anything more will not work.
The voltage of 120 volts is more common that the lower voltage of 12 volts.
Install a 3 volt battery and forget any modifications. It will not operate on 12 volts.
Type your answer here... To use two batteries as a single power source, you have to connect the positive to the negative and the remaining negative to ground. The remaining positive goes to the red positive cable. The batteries are now in a series circuit. If you use two 6 volt batteries the total voltage is 12 volts. If you use 2 12 volt batteries the total voltage is 24 volts. If you hook the batteries both negative to negative and positive to positive you have made a parallel circuit. Batteries in a parallel circuit cancel each other out. Two 6 volt batteries in parallel have a total voltage of 0 volts. klb
yes, most 115 volt devices will work with any voltage from 100 to 130 volts with no problem.
Plugging it into a 220 volt socket will probably destroy it.
Yes no problem.
no