You need to mention the current or connected load to define the size of the wire
240 V @ 50 Hz (US and Canada are 120 V @ 60 Hz)
The voltage is OK, but certain types of motor can't be run on the wrong frequency. If the appliance uses a commutator motor, like many hand tools, it would probably be OK.
It is a motor where the frequency of the AC voltage is 50 cycles per second. In U.S.A. 60 Hz is standard. 50 Hz would be overseas.
Mauritius uses 230 V @ 50 Hz (the US and Canada are 120 V @ 60 Hz)
If a bulb has 50 Hz frequency and it's supply is 60 Hz frequency, it will still glow, despite the allowance of 10 HZ frequency.
Yes it can. It is within the normal voltage / HZ tolerance.
They don't. The UK uses 230 VAC 50 Hz.
Yes !
240 V @ 50 Hz (US and Canada are 120 V @ 60 Hz)
240 V @ 50 Hz, plug I. Non compatible with the US and Canada, but compatible with Australia.
240 volts 50 Hz.
415/240 V, 50 Hz
Domestic: 240 V AC, 50 Hz Industrial: 400 V AC, 50 Hz Plugs used for 240 V: BS-546 and BS-1363
Europe mostly uses 220 to 240 volts AC current at 50 Hz.
Technically Hz and volts are not related. You can have any voltage with any frequency. But in domestic power systems 50 Hz tends to be associated with 220/240 v (Europe) and 60 Hz tends to go with 120/240 v (America).
Yes an adapter can be made. You must keep in mind that the US generator's speed is set for 60 Hz generation. The frequency of a generator is governed by the RPM of the engine. If the generator has speed control on it, it will have to be turned down so that the frequency meter reads 50 Hz.
Homes use different voltages for their power supply in different countries. North America uses 120 v in a split-phase arrangement that allows 240 v to be used for high-power devices. In Europe the standard voltage is 230 v although this is stretched to 240 v in the UK. Public power supplies are invariably AC at 50 Hz in Europe and 60 Hz in America. South America has mostly 60 Hz while Africa, Asia and Australasia use 50 Hz. Japan has 100 v 50 Hz in the east including Tokyo, and 100 v 60 Hz in the west including Nagoya.