The wiring diagram should be on the motor electrical box cover. If not Google the manufactures name of the motor and usually the website has the wiring diagram for the motor.
If it does not come with a plug on it, no. If it is made for direct wire, then 99.9% chance is that it is a 240 volt unit. If you plug it into a 120 volt outlet your water will barely get warm.
No a 230 volt appliance should not be pluuged into a 110 volt socket (And vice versa) you need to buy a converter that can be plugged into the 110 volt outlet then the appliance can be plugged into the converter.
Yes, you can always have heavier wire than code requires.
Sir, i will not go by watts because it can take many hundreds of watts per outlet but it also depend on the size of the wire in the outlet the bigger the number the more watts.
Yes, 220 volts is in the same voltage classification as 230 volts.
Yes
230 volt 50 Hz.
You would have to install a 230 volt outlet.
If it does not come with a plug on it, no. If it is made for direct wire, then 99.9% chance is that it is a 240 volt unit. If you plug it into a 120 volt outlet your water will barely get warm.
No a 230 volt appliance should not be pluuged into a 110 volt socket (And vice versa) you need to buy a converter that can be plugged into the 110 volt outlet then the appliance can be plugged into the converter.
Yes, you can always have heavier wire than code requires.
The simplest way is to buy a DC power supply that plugs into 120 VAC as its power source and the output is DC at 230 VDC either fixed or variable. Make sure it can deliver the current your device requires and that you use the proper size wire for the DC connection based on the amperage.
Outlet for standard electronics is 230 Volt , 50HzThe master feed into Swedish houses is 400 Volt three-phase , 50Hz.When 400 Volt three-phase is split in three single phases it becomes threesingle 230 VoltBigger appliances , e.g Washing-machines, dryers, stoves, used to be400 Volt three-phase, but nowadays most washing-machines and dryersare built for 230 Volt single-phase.
no
Depends on the size of the circuit which you did not list.
No.
I am assuming this is a 120 volt outlet on a single phase home circuit of 60 hertz. If you have ran the wire a long way with too small a wire you could have such a voltage drop. Also you may have a white neutral wire that is loose.