The current will remain in a 220 volt circuit as long as the circuit load remains in the circuit and the circuit remains closed.
Yes, in the form of GFCI circuit breakers, not as a receptacle.
No, not a good idea. You have to use a 347 volt ballast.
Yes, you can always have heavier wire than code requires.
It should work okay.
A volt can not be connected to a circuit.
The current will remain in a 220 volt circuit as long as the circuit load remains in the circuit and the circuit remains closed.
A map of a circuit is not a volt. A map of a circuit is referred to as a schematics chart. The schematics chart details the path of the circuit, from beginning to end.
It depends on the use it is being put to. It is sufficient for a 24 volt circuit. Too much for a 12 volt circuit and too little for a 240 volt circuit.
If you are talking about a 6 volt coil, yes, so long as the contacts are rated for the 230 volt circuit. If you are talking about 6 volt contacts, no, absolutely not.
Yes, in the form of GFCI circuit breakers, not as a receptacle.
No, not a good idea. You have to use a 347 volt ballast.
Yes, you can always have heavier wire than code requires.
It should work okay.
1 volt
Volt difference causes a short circuit! ChaCha
by a volt meter / ameter