The U.S. 60 Hz bulb should be useable in the United Kingdom. Even though the U.K. uses 50 Hz bulbs, this small difference in frequency should not matter.
For 120/208v systems the colors are black - red - blue with a white neutral. For 277/480v and higher systems the colors are brown - orange - yellow with a grey neutral. Countries outside of North America generally use different colors.
The UK uses 50 Hz, and the US uses 60 Hz. (US is 120/240V, 60Hz; UK is 230V, 50Hz, though formerly it was 240V.)It's correct that 230 v is the nominal voltage in the UK but the actual voltage nearly everywhere is 240 v.For more detailed information see the answers to the Related questions shown below.60 hertz.
Probably 60 Watt incandescent (at least until they became difficult to obtain).
no
Yes, E26 and E27 bases will fit the same socket. Have you ever put in a light bulb and noticed it had a very slight wiggle to it or it was a bit tight? this is the primary difference between that 1mm base size difference. Both sizes are sold depending on the manufactures design preference. In the past European bulbs were E27 and US bulbs E26.
In the UK by Swann and independently in the US by Edison
Not unless the appliance is rated to be used with the two different power supplies. The US uses 120v, 60 Hz if it plugs into a receptacle, and possibly 240v, 60Hz if it is hard wired. The UK uses 240v, 50Hz whether it plugs in or is hard wired. These two power systems are NOT compatible. You may use a US appliance in the UK, and vice versa, only if the appliance is dual rated, i.e. the appliance says 120v/60Hz AND 240v/50Hz on the nameplate. If the appliance only specifies one power supply, it can only be used on that power supply. If this is the case, you may be able to use a travel adapter to operate the appliance.
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.
No. Not unless you use a transformer to change the voltage. In the US mains voltage is 110-120 V and the current 60Hz Alternating Current. In the UK and almost all of Europe mains voltage is 230-240 V and the current 50Hz Alternating Current. So, if you attempt to use a US appliance in the UK the voltage, which is at least twice the amount of that in the US will create double the current in the device. This will either immediately blow an internal fuse, or burn the appliance out. In extreme cases it could even cause a fire.
AC means Alternating Current. Alternating Current changes direction constantly, usually at 60Hz (US, Canada, and others) or 50Hz (UK and others).
60HZ
No. Unless you have a UK to US power adaptor you can not use it.
yes you can, but you will have to use a UK proxy.
60hz frequency is being used in us
The voltage isn't a problem, you can run 220 from your house and use that to run a European appliance, the problem is whether the appliance is dependant on line HZ. European is 50HZ and US is 60HZ. If the appliance specifies 220/50HZ, it will probably give you trouble here. If it says 220V/50 or 60HZ
Input would be 120v at 60hz. Standard US wall power.
ofcourse they do