Probably not. Most plug-in power Transformers are not adjustable for use on different voltages. If you are trying to use an appliance in a different country, try using a 240-120v travel converter, or obtain a transformer designed to use the other power source.
No, of course not. The power supply needs to match the 'wall power' to provide the proper voltages to the motherboard. On the bright side, most power supplies sold in the US have a slide switch to select between 110/220 volts input. It may be as simple as moving a little red switch on the back of the power supply to configure your power supply to 110 v.
DC 12V power supply can convert 110/220V AC power source to 12V DC.
Yes most definitely
no
What is the amount of power consumed by a 60 watt 220 volt lamp when it is connected across 110 volt supply?
The maximum current will depend on the voltage of the power supply. For a supply at 240 volts, the max current will be 15000/240 = 62.5 amps. For a supply at 110 volts, the max current will be 15000/110 = 136.36amps to two significant figures.
Not unless you have a 110 volt supply to plug it in to. The standard General Power Outlet in Australia is 240 volts AC at 50 Hertz.
Switch mode power supply (smps) converts 110-230 volts of alternating current to direct current that computer components need. The fan keeps the power supply cool.
The power supply in a computer runs the 110 volts mains power through a transformer into a lower voltage, then lowers that into different voltages (+5v, -12v, +12v, +3.3v) which i believe are then stabilised independently. The power supply also handles the turning on/off the voltages triggered by a signal from the motherboard.
You need a step-up transformer, to go from 110 to 220-240 volts. Then a 110 volt supply can operate 240 volt equipment.
The input power of a computer Power Supply is usually 110-240VAC. The power supply usually transforms the input voltage into 3.3V, 5V, and 12V...all in DC. Different components require different voltage...either (1)ONE of a combination of these. 12V is one output voltage of the PSU(Power Supply)
I think the numbers should both be voltages, if so, absolutely not.