No. You cannot use any battery for it.
Assuming a resistive load, the continuous current flowing would be 600/220 = 1.36 amps. The resistance of the load is 220/1.36 = 162 ohms. If you have a 200 ampere hour battery that only supplies 24 volts you can't run your 600 watt device that is designed to run at 220 volts. For sake of argument, say your load is an incandescent light bulb designed to work at 24 volts. If you attached the battery it would try and draw 600/24 = 25 amps and the resistance of the load would be about 1 ohm. You need to match the voltage source to the load requirements. CAVEAT - This example assumes that if a 24 volt battery was used that the 600 watt device was made to work for 24 volts. It is not the same load that would be for a 600 watt device at 220 volts. The problem is that the hypothetical question asked does not match reality.
No, you will need a commercial mixer for that.
Yes
220 or 240 v. The larger motor required can run more efficiently on 220/240, and produce more power under large loads.
Not much of anything. The 220 volt appliance needs just that ... 220 volts in order to run. If it runs at all, it certainly would not be running at anywhere near peak efficiency.
Yes if the house supply is 220-240 volts. The required voltage range should be printed somewhere on the fan.
Yes, if the appliance was designed to run on 210 to 240 volts.
i have no idea
Assuming a resistive load, the continuous current flowing would be 600/220 = 1.36 amps. The resistance of the load is 220/1.36 = 162 ohms. If you have a 200 ampere hour battery that only supplies 24 volts you can't run your 600 watt device that is designed to run at 220 volts. For sake of argument, say your load is an incandescent light bulb designed to work at 24 volts. If you attached the battery it would try and draw 600/24 = 25 amps and the resistance of the load would be about 1 ohm. You need to match the voltage source to the load requirements. CAVEAT - This example assumes that if a 24 volt battery was used that the 600 watt device was made to work for 24 volts. It is not the same load that would be for a 600 watt device at 220 volts. The problem is that the hypothetical question asked does not match reality.
North American household gas dryers run on 120 volts.
With the engine running you should have a reading of 13.5 to 15.5 volts at the battery. So 14 volts is acceptable.
They are not compatible. You cannot connect any AC device to a DC battery without a inverter. The size of the inverter determines what it will run. And the wattage of the fan determines what size inverter to buy.
You can't. A 220 volt dryer requires 220 volts in order to operate properly. It will not run on 110 volts.
A typical cell phone battery is around four volts, a car battery is twelve volts. That means an adapter is required.
Yes, 120 and 240 volts can be run in the same conduit.
No it will fry the motor use a voltege reducer
220 volts. In the US.