Yes, the maximum that the adapter can deliver is 1300 mA or 1.3 amps. The maximum that the device will draw is 200 mA or .2 of an amp.
No. The adaptor will overheat.
No it will not harm the plug in device. The 1 amp relates to 1000 mA or in other words it has five time the capacity as the 200 mA adapter.
A 9V 1A adapter will supply up to 9 Watts of power and a 9V 200mA adapter delivers up to 1.8W of power. The 200mA adaptor may not be able to supply enough power to a device that has been supplied with a 1A adapter. The 1A adaptor should operate equipment that originally used a 200mA adapter. Before using a different power supply, check that the outputs are both DC or both AC. If they are both DC, it is important to check that the polarity at the connector is the same for both. If AC and DC supplies are swapped or the polarity is swapped there is a risk that the equipment will be damaged.
Yes. There's a subtle difference in the meaning of the "--- ma" labels on the two units:-- On the "device" ... the unit that uses power ... the "200ma" is the current it useswhile it's operating.-- On the "adapter" ... the unit that supplies power ... the "800ma" is the maximumcurrent that it's able to supply. Anything less than that is easy.So your adapter is OK to operate your device. In fact, with suitable wiring and a bit ofcooling, it could nominally operate 4 of them at the same time.
No.If it is AC output, it will blow out the power circuits of the DC device.If it is DC output, it doesn't have enough current capacity for the load of the DC device.If you want to power a DC device with a wall wart, make sure the wart is:DC outputCorrect polarity (some have reversible polarity)Exact same voltage as the deviceGreater than or equal to current rating of the device
No. The 200mA adapter will only produce 1/8th the current of the 1600mA adapter, and probably won't even power what you intend to use. If it does, the extreme undercurrent will likely damage the equipment itself. A possible solution is a universal adapter, which may allow you to set the voltage and/or current for use with the intended device.
Some 9 V adapters rated for 1000 mA will provide 9 V at 1000 mA. If you use it on a 200mA device the voltage may go up to 10-15 V and if that device can not handle the higher voltage, it it could burn out. Better adapters will only put out 9 V exactly and have no problem. Be careful of revere polarity where the positive on one is the negative pin for the other adapter.
INPUT: AC 120V 60Hz OUTPUT: DC 12V 200mA
Yes. The current rating should be the same or greater than the original. This means the adapter can supply up to 500mA; In your case it only needs to supply 200mA, so it is more than up to the job.
200ma is .200 amps or .2 amps
There are, 2000/1000 = ,amps in 2000 milliamps. For the math challenged that is 2 amps.
The voltage would match but the amount of power would likely not be enough to run the device. Under-power will not likely harm the device, but it won't work correctly. Always use the correct voltage/power for your devices!