It might. You need to contact the manufacturer of the netbook and see what adapters are certified for it.
On the surface, it might seem that the adapter of 2.2 amps output could easily run a load of 1.5 amps. That is quite true, but the bigger question is "does the larger adapter correctly handle the charge/discharge characteristic of the battery. It is possible to damage the battery by overcharging it, so this is not a trivial question.
That said, if the electronics that handle the charge control circuit is inside the netbook, it seems reasonable that the larger adapter would be OK.
Bottom line, however, remains - you should contact the manufacturer.
Check the output voltage and mA capacity on the nameplate of the adaptor. The adapter will be useful on devices at that DC voltage and up to the mA capacity of the adaptor E.g. the nameplate may read Input: AC120 volts 5 watts. Output: DC 12 volts 200 mA.
A typical iPod uses 12 v at 1 amp, and with the adaptor for 110/220 v the total consumption is about 20 W.
No, Your original adaptor has an output of 3 amps or 3000 ma. As you can see, the one you want to use for a replacement adaptor only has 1000 ma output, one third of the current capacity that you need.
It could be a problem when the laptop asks for 4.74 amps and the adaptor can't do that without heating up too much.
Charger Output Voltage versus Battery VoltageNO, the output voltage of a charger must be greater than the rated voltage of the battery, usually at least one and a half to two volts difference.
No. The charger for a car battery has an output measured in amps. You have an output measured in milliamps. There are 1000 milliamps to 1 amp. Way too small.
Milwaukee manufactured many battery operated types of equipment. Without knowing what type of equipment you refer to, an answer can not be given. Try looking on the nameplate of the charger. It should state an output voltage in DC volts.
Yes it is in principle, but two things have to be checked. First if it is nominally 12 volts, it might not produce exactly 12 volts, and this needs to be tested so damage is not done to whatever is connected. Secondly, the adaptor/charger has to be able to supply enough current (amps) for whatever you are connecting to it.
No way of telling, but you certainly fried the AC adaptor.
No. The voltage of the charger's output is only 7.5 volts. This is not high enough to charge a 9 volt battery device.
the rest of the cells are dead or you are using a charger that only has a output pressure of 6 volts.
You have to compare the Output of the charger. The voltage is most important. For example: If the ES55 charger puts out .5 Volts and the iPod charger puts out .5 Volts then the voltage is compatible. Both the iTouch charger and Samsung Galaxy Appeal puts out .5 Volts. The Amperage should be near similar, but is not so important since a battery does not draw more than it can handle. The next question is connecting capability. Just try it out if the voltage and amperage match.