If you do this work yourself, always turn off the power
at the breaker box/fuse panel BEFORE you attempt to do any work
AND
always use an electricians test meter having metal-tipped probes
to insure the circuit is, in fact, de-energized.
Your equipment should be labelled on what voltage it works at. If it says 200-250 v that includes 208 v and 240 v. If it says 220/240 v the answer is no but it might work at reduced performance.
In the US the voltage is about 220 volts. This voltage is based upon the average voltage of the AC sine wave. It can peak as high as 240 volts or as low as 210 volts. So these different voltages are actually referring to an average 220 volt system.
12 volts
Yes. Since the coil is run at full voltage when starting 12 volts may be too much for a 6 volt ignition coil. It would be at about 8 volts when running. There is a starting resistor.
one thousand milli volt= one volt
Compressor locked
You can hook up an infinitive number of 12 volt batteries in a parallel circuit and still have 12 volts.
You must hook them up in series. You will need four 12 volt batteries to do this.
Hook a 12 volt light to a 24 volt system and the light will burn out in seconds. You need a step-down voltage converter to do this.
Hook then up in Series. Positive to negative. You then have 24 volts but the same amperage of one individual battery.that will short out other battery
Yes, connect them in Parallel. You will still have 12 volts but the amperage will double which is fine.
Two 6 volt batteries connected together in parallel will still maintain 6 volts but their amperage capacity will be doubled.
France uses 220-240 volts for their electrical system.
...90 volts...
== == It is a 12 volt system. The alternator should put out 13.5 to 14.5 volts with the engine running.== == It is a 12 volt system. The alternator should put out 13.5 to 14.5 volts with the engine running.
In the US the voltage is about 220 volts. This voltage is based upon the average voltage of the AC sine wave. It can peak as high as 240 volts or as low as 210 volts. So these different voltages are actually referring to an average 220 volt system.
You hook them in parallel pos to pos and neg to neg.
NO. Absolutely not, you must hook them in parallel. Two 12 volt batteries hooked in series will give you 24 volts with the same A/H of one of the batteries. Hook them in parallel and you will still have 12 volts and double the A/H of one of the batteries.