In whole Europe there is 230 volts AC, so it is in the UK. Before there was 240 volts.
Cheers ebs
AnswerOfficially, to fall into line with EU harmonisation requirements, the stated voltage in the UK is now 230 V(+10% / -6%). In practice, however, nothing has changed from when the official voltage was 240 V(+/- 6%), as this is little more than a paper exercise.
Yes, if your electronic devices are not compatible with the UK's voltage of 230V, you will need a voltage converter to safely use them.
The voltage requirement for a UK USB plug is typically 230 volts.
In the UK the mains voltage is 240 volts
If you mean in domestic use, the US is at 120 V and the UK at 240 V. So you need a transformer with a 2 to 1 turn ratio, to step up if using a UK appliance in the US, or to step down if using a US appliance in the UK.
230 V
Yes, you will need a voltage converter when traveling from the US to the UK because the UK operates on a 230V electrical system, while the US operates on a 120V system.
It depends what country you're in. Here in the UK, the mains voltage is 230 volts.
no because UK runs on a diffrent voltage system
The nominal voltage in the UK is 400/230 V. That is 400 V line-to-line (i.e. line voltage), and 230-V line-to-neutral (i.e. phase voltage). Allowable variation is +10% and -6%.
220 volts.
Yes, it can. you just need an adaptor.
The voltage of three phase is 415v and the colours are brown black and greyAnswerThe nominal line voltage is 400 V, and the nominal phase voltage is 230 V.