Every device in your house that plugs into a standard outlet and also the various lights in use in a typical residence.
If you want your bulbs to last longer then use 130 volt bulb on a 120 volt system. The light emitted by a 130 volt bulb, when comparing it to a 120 volt bulb, will be a bit dimmer.
No, not a good idea. You have to use a 347 volt ballast.
no
Because it is a 220 volt outlet instead of a 120 volt outlet. Now, if this is a standard 120 volt outlet that is reading 209 volts then someone has made a mistake in the wiring. You need to call an electrician to straighten this out.
You'll fry it
With electrical work it is always smart to use only approved items with different grades of electricity. The answer is NO only use line filters graded for 120 volt.
Can you use a 120 volt bulb in a 130 volt socket?
You tell yourself the 125 volt receptacle is a 120 volt receptacle. They're the same thing.
If you want your bulbs to last longer then use 130 volt bulb on a 120 volt system. The light emitted by a 130 volt bulb, when comparing it to a 120 volt bulb, will be a bit dimmer.
Use a volt meter Plug a 120 volt accessory into it
Yes. But not the other way. 120 volt one, cannot withstand 220volt.
No totally different
Yes, the voltage listed on the bulb is the nominal voltage and it will work perfectly on a 120 volt circuit.
Yes.
Yes, but it will not work.
Yes, the 130 volts you read on the bulb is the maximum it will handle. It will work perfectly on a 120 volt circuit and will actually last longer than a standard 120 volt bulb.
Yes, the 130 volts you read on the bulb is just the maximum it will handle. It will work perfectly in a 120 volt circuit.