Yes as they use 120 so your 240 wont be affected but using their 120 on our 240 wouldn't do any good
I believe you mean 120 240 and yes. as long as the country your going to has lower voltage than your country you will be fine
250 V is not a nominal voltage used in Europe or in North America, although it may be elsewhere in the world. If so, then, yes, there will be 100-W lamps marketed for that particular voltage in that particular part of the world.The nominal voltage in Europe is 230 V and the nominal voltage (for lamps) in North America is 120 V. So, in Europe and North America, 100-W lamps are rated at 230 V and 120 V respectively.
On a vehicle, of course it will. The vehicle does not care where it is being driven.
Yes, because the European nominal voltage of 230 V is allowed to vary between +10% and -6%, which means it can be as high as 253 V.
The engine computer is the voltage regulator.
voltage regulator on 1987 ford f250
Probably not w/o an adaptor. The voltage in the outlets are different in the US and Europe. The frequency is different too but usually that's not critical.
The voltage regulator on a 2004 250 Trailblazer is integrated into the alternator. Because of this, to change the regulator, it is easiest to replace the entire alternator.
Depends on the voltage. AMPS X VOLTS = WATTS 250 Watts at 12 V would be about 21 Amps, while 250 watts at 120 volts would be 2.1 amps.
A transformer is a power source. It will provide voltage to a device. Find the voltage rating on the device, say 24V. 250/24 = ~10A.
You use varistor wich has the max voltage for that aplication example:vacuumcleanermax allowed voltage is 240v ac so you chose aprox. 250 V varistor.
Lots of electronic items from America will work in Europe. You may need an adaptor to be able to plug them in as the voltage system is different. The television system is different, so some items may not work properly, like DVDs, as the region setting is different.