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4.5 volt battery sold only in Russo
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, a 9 volt battery is small (goes in a smoke detector) a 9.6 volt battery is much larger, and it is not a DC battery (direct current) but NiCd (nickel cadmium.) two totally different things.
No, the battery is DC not AC.
a 9 volt battery
All Batteries are DC or Direct Current.
batteries are only used for DC CIRCUTS. if the motor is a DC MOTOR you can.
No. The motor was designed to run on a specific voltage and any variance from it will not work. The amperage of the motor is what you should be looking at. A single 1.5 volt battery neither has the voltage nor the capacity to produce any thing close to the amperage you would need to run the 12 volt motor.
you would have to put some type of resistor in the circuit with the motor...the resistor would have to be in series with the motor and would have to be of a high enough value to lower the voltage by 9 volts....There is a formula for working this out but you would need the amperage of the motor to figure this....
The output of a 120 volt dimmer switch will be an AC voltage so should not be used on a DC motor.
Yes but only up to a load torque of 8/9 of the rated torque.
It means the voltage output of the battery is 12 volts DC.