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Your stereo system has an internal transformer in the power supply that is designed to operate at a given frequency. If it is designed to operate at the load your stereo system will use at 50 Hz, then yes. Otherwise this transformer will overheat when connected at the wrong frequency, and will burn out. You might be lucky and the power supply may be labelled to operate at 50 or 60Hz; if not, I recommend contacting the manufacturer. A voltage transformer will convert 50Hz 220 to 50Hz 110. To change frequency, you need special equipment.
no way because frequency cannot change
yes it is pssible to use , you can apply higher volt acording to ratio 400/50 ,and you can get more powe up to 8 times comparing to 50hz system.
no
3-50hz mean = -47
At the time electricity was implemented for domestic use, India was under British rule. 240v 50Hz is the British system. 240v was deemed to be the ideal compromise between safety and having conductors suitably small, using less current for power required. 50Hz is half of 100 in an attempt to metricate the system.
The Philippines uses NTSC 60Hz television standards, the same as the US. The UK system is 50Hz PAL and the two are incompatible. Although there are ways to use UK equipment in non PAL regions, it can get very expensive and time consuming. Because of differences in mains, transmission frequencies and formats and regional coding protection on games and DVDs it almost always works out less expensive to obtain equipment locally.
There should be no problem at all.
The mains supply in Scotland is 50Hz.
No. France also runs on 50Hz as opposed to the US 60Hz system.
Only issue would be the losses. Iron losses will be largly affected
How much it uses has nothing to do with the 50Hz. You need the Watt rating for that.