No, you cannot directly use a 230 V 50 Hz lamp in Canada, as the standard voltage is 120 V and the frequency is 60 Hz. Using the lamp without a proper voltage converter could damage the lamp or create safety hazards. If you want to use the lamp in Canada, you'll need a step-down transformer to convert 120 V to 230 V, and you should also check if the lamp is compatible with 60 Hz.
No. Australia's electricity supply is 230 volts at 50Hz... america's is 120 volts at 60Hz.
There should be no problem at all.
The Netherlands uses 220 volts at 50hz and the UK uses 230 volts at 50 hz. So as long as you use a 230 volt light bulb in your UK home the fixture will work perfectly. It can handle the extra 10 volts.
Exactly the same plugs as in the UK.The actual plug type is known internationally as Type 'G' and is used on 230 Volts AC running at a frequency of 50Hz.
How much it uses has nothing to do with the 50Hz. You need the Watt rating for that.
230V/50Hz
220VAC at 50Hz
Yes - Australia and New Zealand use the same AS/NZS 3112 power plug - Two converging diagonal pins for live and neutral, and a vertical flat pin for earth. Voltage for both countries are 230-240V 50hz.
The US does not use 120 volts at 50 Hertz.
Mauritius uses 230 V @ 50 Hz (the US and Canada are 120 V @ 60 Hz)
For many years, mainland Western Europe has used a mains electricity supply rated at nominally 220VAC @ 50Hz, while the UK used 240VAC @ 50Hz. Currently, ALL Western European supplies are classified 230VAC and most other countries follow this. However the US and Canada use 120 V @ 60 Hz.
For many years, mainland Western Europe has used a mains electricity supply rated at nominally 220VAC @ 50Hz, while the UK used 240VAC @ 50Hz. Currently, ALL Western European supplies are classified 230VAC and most other countries follow this. However the US and Canada use 120 V @ 60 Hz.