For the USA its 240V (120V on each line/phase).
In the UK, 230-240 volts.AnswerFor the UK, the legal requirement is 230 V (-6%/+10%). Incidentally, volts don't 'come out' of a socket!!!
45 volts
Depends on the country
In the US a general purpose receptacle outlet would be 120 volts; England 240 volts, France 115 volts, Libya 127 volts, Okinawa 100 volts, Tanzania 230 volts . . .; all depends on where your house is.
No. 240 Volts was the nominal standard in Australia with a tolerance of +/- 10%, So the voltage could be anywhere between 216 Volts and 264 Volts. The change to 230 volts is part of international harmonisation between countries that use 220 volt standards and 240 volt Standards. The new tolerance levels are +10% and - 6%.
Batteries come with different voltages.
I believe what you need for a 3 bed house is 60 amps.
In the UK, 230-240 volts.AnswerFor the UK, the legal requirement is 230 V (-6%/+10%). Incidentally, volts don't 'come out' of a socket!!!
My understanding is that it takes about 20,000 volts to arc between the two parts of the spark plug and most automotive coil put out 20,000-50,000 volts.
45 volts
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Depends on the country
1000
230 Volts
the answer is 1293823192 cow craps put together to make a atomic bomb
In the US a general purpose receptacle outlet would be 120 volts; England 240 volts, France 115 volts, Libya 127 volts, Okinawa 100 volts, Tanzania 230 volts . . .; all depends on where your house is.
No. 240 Volts was the nominal standard in Australia with a tolerance of +/- 10%, So the voltage could be anywhere between 216 Volts and 264 Volts. The change to 230 volts is part of international harmonisation between countries that use 220 volt standards and 240 volt Standards. The new tolerance levels are +10% and - 6%.