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.
It should work okay.
Yes, you can always have heavier wire than code requires.
On most residential circuit breaker boxes in North America, each individual breaker represents one 120-volt circuit. Two breakers ganged together represent a 240-volt circuit.
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.
It should work okay.
1 volt
Volt difference causes a short circuit! ChaCha
Yes, you can always have heavier wire than code requires.