No. The adaptor will overheat.
Yes, you can use a 300mA adapter on a 1A device, but it may not work properly or could damage the adapter. The device may draw more current than the adapter can provide, leading to insufficient power, potential overheating, or failure of the adapter. It's always best to use an adapter that meets or exceeds the device's current requirements for optimal performance and safety.
Yes, the maximum that the adapter can deliver is 1300 mA or 1.3 amps. The maximum that the device will draw is 200 mA or .2 of an amp.
No it will not harm the plug in device. The 1 amp relates to 1000 mA or in other words it has five time the capacity as the 200 mA adapter.
No, you should not use a 5V DC 800mA adapter in place of a 6V DC 300mA adapter. The output voltage and current ratings of the adapter need to match those required by the device you are powering. Using an adapter with lower voltage or significantly higher current may damage the device. It's best to use an adapter that matches the specified requirements.
I think you mean to ask if one can use a 9v 600mA adapter to power a 9v 300mA appliance. Yes, you can do that. A 9v 600mA adapter will deliver 9v at up to 600mA. A mA is one milli amp, or one thousandth of an amp. 300mA is 300 thousandth of an amp, 300/1000 or 0.3 amps. 600mA is 600 thousandth of an amp, 600/1000 or 0.6 amps, and is twice the current of 300mA.
No.If it is AC output, it will blow out the power circuits of the DC device.If it is DC output, it doesn't have enough current capacity for the load of the DC device.If you want to power a DC device with a wall wart, make sure the wart is:DC outputCorrect polarity (some have reversible polarity)Exact same voltage as the deviceGreater than or equal to current rating of the device
The voltage would match but the amount of power would likely not be enough to run the device. Under-power will not likely harm the device, but it won't work correctly. Always use the correct voltage/power for your devices!
Most probably you are using a AC (117V or 220V) to DC 6V converter adapter. If yes, then the answer is no, you cannot use a lower current rating for a device that draws more current. If you plug in a device that needs DC 6V 500 mA to an adapter that can only supply DC 6V 300mA, then the adapter could start sending higher than 6 volts current which may damage your equipment or overheat the adapter. If you are using a higher mA rating adapter, then it's okay. For more technical details, see: http://www.jaycar.com.au/images_uploaded/plugpack.pdf
No, a power adapter must supply the same voltage, same polarity, and at least as much current as the load requires. Your adapter can only supply 300mA, which is less than the 700mA required by the load.Your game probably will not turn on and the power adapter may be damaged.
Yes, you can use a 300mA power supply in place of a 400mA supply, but it may not provide enough current for the device to operate properly. If the device requires 400mA and only receives 300mA, it may underperform, malfunction, or even be damaged due to insufficient power. It's important to ensure that the power supply meets or exceeds the current requirements of the device for safe and effective operation.
Yes you can, however in an unusual situation (i.e. electrical fault in the device), the adapter will allow 5x the current the device is rated for to pass into that device. In normal operation, the device will draw what it needs, based on fans running or not, etc. Under these conditions, as long as the adapter puts out the proper Voltage, the device will operate just fine.
Yes. The current rating should be the same or greater than the original. This means the adapter can supply up to 500mA; In your case it only needs to supply 200mA, so it is more than up to the job.