Look on the equipment near where the electrical cable enters, and there should be a small plate with the correct voltage range printed on it.
You need a step-up transformer, to go from 110 to 220-240 volts. Then a 110 volt supply can operate 240 volt equipment.
The voltage can be changed by a transformer, but the power remains constant. So if you have a supply of 1 microvolt, it would have to supply 1 million amps to give a power of 1 watt (power = volts times amps).
No you can not. The power supply output of 5 volts is under sized. There is no way that a 45 volt device would operate from it. You will need to find a power supply of 45 volts.
ELECTRICITYNote: Some power supplies operate on 120 volts 60 Hz ac but others operate on 230 volts 50 Hz ac.Which voltage your power supply uses depends on which country you are in.For more information see the answers to the Related Questions shown below.
At 120 volts you can operate any equipment up to 1200 watts. At 240 volts you can operate any equipment up to 2400 watts.
The maximum voltage rating for equipment that can be safely operated with a power supply of 230 VAC is typically around 250 volts.
Point three three or 1/3rd of a volt will power any piece of equipment that is designed to operate on that voltage. To put it into perspective 1 volt = .33 volts x 3.
Household electricity is supplied to a pc's power supply module as alternating current (ac).The power supply converts it into direct current (dc) at various voltages - such as +12V , +5V, etc. - which are then delivered to the pc's subsystems.Some power supplies operate on 120 volts 60 Hz ac but others operate on 230 volts 50 Hz ac.Which voltage your power supply uses depends on which country you are in.For more information see the answers to the Related Questions shown below.
If the appliance is strictly resistive heating there will be no problem. If the appliance has a motor load connected with it, the unit will operate a bit slower and operate a bit warmer.
No. The rating on the power supply means: "This power supply maintains 6 volts between its terminals, and will supply whatever current is required by the device it powers, as long as that current doesn't exceed 1.8A for very long." Since the equipment is only expected to need 600-1000 mA (that's 0.6 to 1 A), that power supply will support it nicely, and neither the power supply nor the equipment will damage the other.
Yes, 1000 ma equates to 1 amp. The 4 amp power supply will have more than enough capacity to operate any device drawing 1 amp.Just make sure that the voltages match. AC voltage of the power supply to AC voltage on the device. You can not cross voltages using a DC power supply to operate an AC device, or the other way around, an AC power supply to operate a DC powered device, even though the voltage values are the same.
No. You are missing 10 volts.