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There is no problem with that voltage. As long as the voltage is plus or minus 5% of the nominal voltage of 115 volts it is considered to be in the 120 volt range.
Yes. All Canadian regular household outlets work at 110-120 Volts.
Residential applications are around 110v to 120v, 220-240v, in this range, its 120 volts nominal to a typical wall outlet, however you may read anywhere from 110volts to 120 volts or so, the highest I have seen personally in residential was 245volts.
Yes - usually house voltage varies from 110 to 120 volts.
It depends on which country that you live in. European and UK, the household voltage is 230 volts. In North America, the household voltage is 120 volts. Other countries around the world, the blankets that are sold will match the household supply of that country.
There is no problem with that voltage. As long as the voltage is plus or minus 5% of the nominal voltage of 115 volts it is considered to be in the 120 volt range.
Yes. All Canadian regular household outlets work at 110-120 Volts.
No, its very high
Residential applications are around 110v to 120v, 220-240v, in this range, its 120 volts nominal to a typical wall outlet, however you may read anywhere from 110volts to 120 volts or so, the highest I have seen personally in residential was 245volts.
Yes - usually house voltage varies from 110 to 120 volts.
110-120 volts
yes, most 115 volt devices will work with any voltage from 100 to 130 volts with no problem.
120
It depends on which country that you live in. European and UK, the household voltage is 230 volts. In North America, the household voltage is 120 volts. Other countries around the world, the blankets that are sold will match the household supply of that country.
120 Volts and 115 Volts refer to the same thing in the US. Residential electricity is provided at 120 Volts from the utility. High current devices such as motors are often rated at less than the supplied voltage (such as 115 Volts) because it is expected that there is a small amount of voltage drop in the circuit feeding them. The National Electric Code allows a 5% drop in voltage from the electric service so a 5 Volt drop from 120 Volts is OK.
Barbados has a voltage of 115 V @ 50 Hz (vs 120 V @ 60 Hz in the US and Canada). You should have no compatibility problems though.
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%.