Of course, unless somehow you destroy it by plugging it into a voltage it can't handle.
if its a single current its 120v X 25 amp = 3000 watts
Well, a 120V appliance that draws 15A would be using 1800W. (15x120). A killowatt hour is one killowatt used continuously for an hour. If you used that device for one hour straight, it would use 1.8 kWh. (Keep in mind the device may not draw a full 15A)
I'm sure just like everything else there are different sizes, which will make it vary, but you're about to know something that most don't. Volts x Amperes = Watts, or Watts divided by Volts = Amperes. Example say the appliance says 120V and 8Amp you mutiply 120 by 8 = 960Watts. If it says 1200W and 120V then you do 1200 divided by 120 = 10Amperes.
Normally you can't use 205V equipment on 120Volts
Yes, as long as the amp rating is the same. Examples, 600v 100amp fuse can be used in a 120v 100 amp's location.
120V appliance will not work on 220V. Use an instrument transformer or voltage regulator to adjust the high voltage to the desired level.
A high voltage will certainly damage a low voltage appliance and perhaps set fire to other things nearby.
Not unless the appliance is rated to be used with the two different power supplies. The US uses 120v, 60 Hz if it plugs into a receptacle, and possibly 240v, 60Hz if it is hard wired. The UK uses 240v, 50Hz whether it plugs in or is hard wired. These two power systems are NOT compatible. You may use a US appliance in the UK, and vice versa, only if the appliance is dual rated, i.e. the appliance says 120v/60Hz AND 240v/50Hz on the nameplate. If the appliance only specifies one power supply, it can only be used on that power supply. If this is the case, you may be able to use a travel adapter to operate the appliance.
The voltage isn't a problem, you can run 220 from your house and use that to run a European appliance, the problem is whether the appliance is dependant on line HZ. European is 50HZ and US is 60HZ. If the appliance specifies 220/50HZ, it will probably give you trouble here. If it says 220V/50 or 60HZ
Change the receptacle and the plug is the best way to do this. Provided you use a properly rated plug, changing the plug type will not affect the appliance at all.
if its a single current its 120v X 25 amp = 3000 watts
yes
Well, a 120V appliance that draws 15A would be using 1800W. (15x120). A killowatt hour is one killowatt used continuously for an hour. If you used that device for one hour straight, it would use 1.8 kWh. (Keep in mind the device may not draw a full 15A)
The LG PC suite comes from, ofcourse, the LG brand. The cell phone, LG Viewty uses this appliance to synchronize. More phones from LG might be able to use this appliance.
Probably not. Most plug-in power transformers are not adjustable for use on different voltages. If you are trying to use an appliance in a different country, try using a 240-120v travel converter, or obtain a transformer designed to use the other power source.
The appliance helped me at work
only the appliance power