Everything, in a country like the USA where the normal supply works on 60 Hz.
This can not be answered with the information you have given. 60Hz does not relate the the current draw so wire size can not be calculated.
115 vac 60hz
Do you mean definition? If so 110V = 110 volts-60hz = 60 hertz. Hertz is the cycles that the electricity runs at. 60hz. is the US standard. Europe is at 50hz.
1920
One way would be to hook it up to a supply (by itself, with no load) and measure the speed with a contact tachometer. If your supply is 60Hz, and the motor speed corresponded to one of the standard motor speeds, it would be a pretty safe bet you had a 60Hz motor. If the speed was about 20% faster than a standard speed, the motor is probably a 50Hz motor. Or 20% slower if you were running a 60Hz motor on 50Hz For instance, a 1750 RPM 50Hz motor would spin at about 2100 RPM if you ran it on 60Hz.
This can not be answered with the information you have given. 60Hz does not relate the the current draw so wire size can not be calculated.
Current = voltage x resistance. Therefore the current will be the same, assuming both frequencies are the same input voltage.
Yes, using a 220v-60hz microwave in Australia is fine. The voltage of alternating current supplied to homes in Australia is 220v. The frequency of the voltage is 50hz.
I don't understand your question. Are you asking how to convert from 60hz to 25hz using a transformer? That cannot be done. Frequency in = frequency out.
AC means Alternating Current. Alternating Current changes direction constantly, usually at 60Hz (US, Canada, and others) or 50Hz (UK and others).
115 vac 60hz
in a 60hz system anything that is not a 60Hz sine wave is a harmonic this is caused by non linear devices with 120 volts if a device draws more current at 170V than at 0 volts it will cause current at peak and -peak for a 120hz harmonic in the current If the wiring is not 0 ohms you get funny ringing through the whole system
Through the use of a high-voltage direct-current link.
150000va divided by (600volts X 1.732) = 144 amps
equipments designed in that countries can withstand frequency upto 60 HZ.
Well, honey, 60Hz is a frequency, not a measurement of current. It's like comparing apples to oranges. If you want to know how many amps a device draws at 60Hz, you need to look at the device's power rating and do some basic math. So, in short, 60Hz is equal to zero amps, but that's not really the whole story.
Multiply the current by the voltage: 120 times 0.3, which is 40 watts.