There is nothing to convert. You are using the same unit of measurement. A hertz is a hertz, all you are dealing with is 10 less Hertz.
60 Hertz - 10 Hertz = 50 Hertz
The difference is 10 Hertz. The math there is just to give you a clear example and illustrate my point.
What you are asking for is similar to someone asking "how do you convert miles to miles" or "how do I convert inches to inches".
It would cost the utility companies and consumers billions of dollars to change all of the equipment to 60 Hz. You have England to thank for your 50 Hz systems.
Hz is a frequency UK Electricity goes through 50 cycles per second = 50 hz , Watts is the power so there is no conversion as they are different things
Hz means Hertz which is a measure of frequency. It was once just referred to as cycles per second. In the USA 60 Hz is the normal frequency for AC in a business or residence. It has nothing to do with the amperage per se.
Your question is akin to asking how many beef steaks are there in an orange! The ampere (not amp!) is used to measure electric current; the hertz is used to measure frequency. These are two completely different quantities and do not equate to each other!
Same as the US and Canada, 110 V. However it has an electrical frequency of 50 Hz, which is 60 Hz in the US and Canada.
There is no inherent disadvantage of 50 Hz compared with 60 Hz, bearing in mind that systems that run at 50 Hz are designed to run at 50 Hz.
10 Hz 10 Hz
If a bulb has 50 Hz frequency and it's supply is 60 Hz frequency, it will still glow, despite the allowance of 10 HZ frequency.
no, Hertz (Hz) is a measure of frequency, Watts (W) is a measure of power.
In North America 60 Hertz. Europe 50 Hertz.
It is a motor where the frequency of the AC voltage is 50 cycles per second. In U.S.A. 60 Hz is standard. 50 Hz would be overseas.
60 Hz in North America, 50 Hz in Europe.
Generally speaking, an isolation transformer will work pretty much the same for 50 Hertz as for 60 Hertz. There will be some slight differences, but the frequency is low enough and the the range narrow enough that the transformer will just "do its thing" regardless. Note that the isolation transformer won't change the frequency of the input. An input of 50 Hz or 60 Hz will yield an output of 50 Hz and 60 Hz respectively. No change should be expected.
Yes !
motor will run at a faster rate.....
As clock motors are synchronous in design for a particular frequency, the 60 Hz clock will run slower on 50 Hz.
Hz = hertz ,which is a measure of frequency. It is equivalent to cycles per second. Your home power is 60 Hz if you live in USA.