Most solid-state electronics operate on d.c. Providing its in-built power supply (i.e. transformer, rectifier, smoothing circuits) can support either frequency, then there should be no problem. My hi-fi amplifer, tuner, and electrostatic loudspeakers are each designed to work on either 50 or 60 Hz. My LCD television is designed to work at either frequency. Most laptop computers and mobile phones can be charged at either frequency as they are intended to be used internationally.
R.A.N. INTERNATIONAL ELECTRONICS
Possibly. You need to check the rating on the device. Many compressors can operate on either 50 or 60 Hz.
No. With the values given the motor will run at 1500 RPM. RPM = Hz x 60 x 2/# of poles. The only way the motor can be run at that speed is by using a VFD as its source of power.
It reduces contact noise by reducing large voltage and current spikes as the relay is opened and closed, called a snubbing resistor. Before the age of solid state controllers, there were no resistors across the solenoids. The purpose of the resistor is to provide a charging voltage for the capacitors inside the solid state contoller. Without the resistor it would take several seconds for the (50,000 microfarad) capacitor to charge and the equipment to run. With the resistor the capacitors are charged while the solenoid is open and the equipment is ready to run at all times.
I'm not an electrician and someone else can surely give you a better answer than this, but here goes: * Electricity- is the reason why electronics has a function to used by man. -support our appliances.* Electronics are the things that need electricity to run on. Electronics are things like stereos, graphic equalizers, car stereo amplifiers, the guts of a GPS device, etc., ... it can also refer to the stuff inside these devices like wires, circuit boards, capacitors, resistors, RAM, circuits, etc. Example:Here's an anology: Imagine one of those old grain mills next to a creek that's powered by the running water. The water would be like the electricity and the gears, wheels, and presses inside would be the electronics.
Unlikely but possible - read the data sheet. If you don't have the data sheet it probably exists on the www.
R.A.N. INTERNATIONAL ELECTRONICS
Solid state drives are drives that run off of flash memory rather than a hard disk.
the 50Hz things have a bit more iron and copper will run a bit cooler at 60hz
No because the pump motor will run too fast and the lifetime of the fridge will be severely reduced.
Sure if you are in a country that uses the 50 hertz cycle and you have a charger designed to run at 50 hertz. In the U.S. it will not work. ------------------------------------------------------------ A battery charges on DC, not AC. The battery charger may not work at the wrong frequency, however.
Different consumer electronics are designed for different batteries. The range of electronics is too vast to give any other answer
Yes, and it will run a little faster on 60 Hertz.
It is a machine or device that been run or tranducer by electronics
In America we use 60 hertz power. It is changed to d.c. to operate the unit. Their processors run at high frequencies. Many megahertz. You have to know which system to know that frequency.
One hertz is equal to one cycle per second. The hertz is named after German physicist Heinrich Hertz (1857-1894). In the computer, 10 MHZ is ten million cycles per second. This stream of "pulses" might be used as a clock to orderly conduct a sequence of events (like run a computer program).
Yes, of course they will as long as the computer is designed to run on the volts and hertz in whatever African country you are referring to.