Yes but only up to a load torque of 8/9 of the rated torque.
No. you need a DC supply for a DC motor.
you can but if you do, you will/might: A) kill the motor,B)overload your 18 volt power supply, and C) maybe short a breaker if your power supply is also an ac to dc converter
You can not change it. 440 volt is by design. However you run it with 220 single phase supply, but it would run far lower power.
Sorry, won't work. You need a 110 volt supply.
Yes, but the motor's horsepower rating will not be reached.
If a 48 Volt club car electric motor requires 48 volts, then it should be given a 48 volt power source, or something close to it. Too many more volts and it may burn out; not enough volts and it may not run or it will try to draw too much power and burn out the power supply.
you can but if you do, you will/might: A) kill the motor,B)overload your 18 volt power supply, and C) maybe short a breaker if your power supply is also an ac to dc converter
No 380 volts is too wide a spread to use a 220 volt motor on.
No, the voltage difference is too much. A 570 volt motor falls in the 600 volt range which is separate from the 480 volt range of three phase systems.
You can not change it. 440 volt is by design. However you run it with 220 single phase supply, but it would run far lower power.
If the power supply has a 5 volt tap on the secondary side of the transformer, yes. If there is no tap and the secondary side of the power supply is only 10 volts then no, you can not substitute the higher voltage unit.
Sorry, won't work. You need a 110 volt supply.
When 500 mA of current is flowing from a 4-volt supply, the supply is delivering 2 watts of electrical power. We can't tell how much of that power is actually available from the motor in the form of mechanical power, and how much of it is only heating up the parts of the motor.
what is the number of turns in the primary and secondary coil for 12 volt battery charger with 220 volt power supply> what is the number of turns in the primary and secondary coil for 12 volt battery charger with 220 volt power supply>
no
This assumes you have a 12 volt direct motor. You should be able to simply reverse the wires leading to the terminals. There should be two wires going to the motor. Change them around.
Yes, but the motor's horsepower rating will not be reached.
You cannot run a three phase motor on single phase power. You'll burn the motor up within minutes. By the way, I've never seen or heard of a 380 volt motor. Do you mean a 480 volt motor? If so, the only way you can power it is with the correct full voltage and a 3 phase power supply.