Typically residential voltage may range from 110 to 120 volts so there should be no problem.
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Yes 110/120 volt is typical house current in North America
If the ballast of the HPS fixture has a 120 volt tap then, yes it can be plugged into a 120 volt receptacle.
Yes. All Canadian regular household outlets work at 110-120 Volts.
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Only use 110-120 volt appliances on a 110 volt socket.
When equipment is run at a lower voltage than it is designed for, it does not operate correctly. A light will glow dimly or not at all, a heater produces much less heat. Electronic equipment may not function at all.
Yes, a 110 volt device can be plugged into a 125 volt receptacle. The voltage rating on the receptacle is only there as the highest voltage supply that the manufacturer recommends their equipment be connected to.
Yes.
No conversion needed. These are nominal voltages which range from 110 to 120 volts. It will operate fine on the outlet.
Yes - usually house voltage varies from 110 to 120 volts.
Yes. Circuits in a home are 120 volts but people tend to call them 110 volt circuits. The 120 volts you read on the appliance is the maximum voltage the appliance can handle. The actual voltage you will read at any outlet will range from 110 to 120 volts.