You can not change it. 440 volt is by design. However you run it with 220 single phase supply, but it would run far lower power.
This assumes you have a 12 volt direct motor. You should be able to simply reverse the wires leading to the terminals. There should be two wires going to the motor. Change them around.
You can increase the speed of an Yamaha 48 volt golf cart by installing a larger motor or more powerful batteries. This will produce more power to the wheels and more speed.
No, that is too much.
No, but it can power one
Yes a 208 voltage motor will operate on 220 volts. You have to increase the motor overload protection by 10% of the motor's full load amperage to protect the motor.
you can but if you do, you will/might: A) kill the motor,B)overload your 18 volt power supply, and C) maybe short a breaker if your power supply is also an ac to dc converter
No 380 volts is too wide a spread to use a 220 volt motor on.
No, the voltage difference is too much. A 570 volt motor falls in the 600 volt range which is separate from the 480 volt range of three phase systems.
Use a transformer.
The difference in voltage is a minor detail and the power used depends largely on the mechanical load power on the motor.
Not usually. But this depends on how the motor is made. So a permanent magnet motor is usually a d.c. Motor. It's something to do as with the wires in the motor, the electromagnet-outer fields are wound.