As long as it will physically fit then it can be done. Plug and jacks are not usually voltage rated ad they are not handling large amounts of current.
115 Volt and a 110 Volt can be treated as the same thing. The electrical voltage supplied from your electric company is not exact and can be 120 Volt + or - 10%.
To find the amps a 1200-watt microwave uses on a 120-volt plug, you can use the formula: Amps = Watts / Volts. Therefore, 1200 watts divided by 120 volts equals 10 amps. So, a 1200-watt microwave uses approximately 10 amps when plugged into a standard 120-volt outlet.
Yes, in electrical items you can use anything in either 10%+-. Most anything has a 10% differential that will work just as well, even in mechanical items it may be more then +- 10%.
Yes you can. Most electrical appliances will work if supplied with power that's within 10% of their voltage rating.
AC devices are generally designed with a 7-10% tolerance on input mains. Yes it will work, yes there will be a very minor loss of efficiancy but not so that you would notice in your electricty bill.
Using a 10 volt power supply for a 9 volt keyboard is not a good idea. The higher voltage will cause damage to the keyboard, burning it out and making it useless.
It varies from year to year and standard cab or ext cab. Consult the owners manual.
Use a properly rated potentiometer.
YES You Have to have a hdtv and plug the green cord in the green jack and put the usb jack into the ps3 put the pink cord in the usb jack then you can hear footsteps perfect i just got mine today and they are awesome. To dumb it down Green jack in tv pink cord attach to usb jack plug usb jack in computer follow these instruction you will then have surround sound and oh yeah these headphones are crystal clear. their noise cancel but only from 10 feet to longer away. i have a ceiling fan and i can here make the bom bom bom bom bom bom bom bom bom bom bom bom noise its aggrevating so i leave my fan off hope this helps got to get back to the battlefield on bf3. bye
12 volt 10 amp charger is what you need.
No and it wouldn't work. The wires in a standard plug (#14) even at 240 volts would not be large enough to handle the 30 amps (#10) that a dryer would need.
Plug In Plug Out was created on 2009-10-27.