Each equipment has electrical specifications; for example most laptop chargers are rated to handle 110V to 240V at either 50-60Hz. In other words; the charger can be plugged into either 110V or 240V and it will adjust automatically and keeps the output at the voltage the computer requires.
Some desktops have an option on the power supply to accept either voltage, which must be set manually.
However; much of the electrical equipments are set to a single voltage and it can not be changed. should someone plug in a 110V rated equipment into a higher voltage (i.e. 240) then the internal parts will burn.
If the ballast of the HPS fixture has a 120 volt tap then, yes it can be plugged into a 120 volt receptacle.
sorry meant to say 14.3 volt power source
It shouldn't damage the equipment. But it will probably not work properly.
The wire sizing of any equipment is related to the amperage that the equipment draws. Look on the air conditioner and restate the question and give the amps that the unit uses and at what voltage.
Answer for USA, Canada and countries running a 60 Hz supply service.A three wire installation provides a power source for independent 120 volt circuits and 240 volt circuit with neutral.A common 120/240 volt 200 amp distribution service panel can have 42 circuits supplied from it. These circuits can be in any number of different combinations of 120 volts or 240 volts.
temporary it blows or KABOOOMM....
It should be ok
When equipment is run at a lower voltage than it is designed for, it does not operate correctly. A light will glow dimly or not at all, a heater produces much less heat. Electronic equipment may not function at all.
A bright flash and a dud bulb, possibly a blown fuse instead.
zzzzzzzzzzzAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAPPPPPPPPPP !!!!!
Yes, a 110 volt device can be plugged into a 125 volt receptacle. The voltage rating on the receptacle is only there as the highest voltage supply that the manufacturer recommends their equipment be connected to.
No, the source voltage can not change to a lower voltage without using equipment to do so.
If the supply voltage is Vs and the equipment voltage is Va, then the equipment will work if Va = Vs (equation). But if Vs / Va = 220 / 120 (equation) the equipment will fail.
It might explode, it might blow the fuse, but it will not work properly. But laptop power supplies seem to work from 100 v to 240 v without any switching.
It'll only deliver 1/4 of the power.
First, someone would have changed the plug before that would be possible. 240 Volt receptacles do not accept 120 Volt plugs. Second, IF someone changed the plug on the compressor, then plugged it in using both legs of the 240 Volt circuit, the compressor motor would self destruct instantly; internal wiring would burn and you would smell the burning insulation.
If the ballast of the HPS fixture has a 120 volt tap then, yes it can be plugged into a 120 volt receptacle.