It should work okay.
To wire a 230 volt contactor with a 110 volt coil, you need to connect the 110 volt power supply to one terminal of the coil and the neutral wire to the other terminal of the coil. Ensure that the contactor is rated for use with a 110 volt control circuit. Additionally, verify the wiring diagram provided with the contactor for proper connection details.
For a 1500 watt hot water heater connected to a 110 volt power source, you would need a 13.6 amp circuit. It is recommended to use a 15 amp circuit to provide some safety margin.
Frequency is independent of voltage magnitude. It depends upon type AC or DC.
No, it won't get enough power and won't work.
No !
NO - that is dangerous.
yes the bulb will actually last longer
Yes, the two voltages are in the same range category.
No. The bulb will burn out.
Yes. 110 and 220 plugs are different so that you cannot plug a 110 recepticle into a 220 outlet and vice versa. If a home is wired for 220 it means that the potential is there for 220 recepticles. Your oven and clothes dryer require 220.
No. The 240V lamp will pop the circuit or fuse because the draw is higher than the supply.
No. You need to rewire the circuit from the electric panel.
Yes.
To wire a 230 volt contactor with a 110 volt coil, you need to connect the 110 volt power supply to one terminal of the coil and the neutral wire to the other terminal of the coil. Ensure that the contactor is rated for use with a 110 volt control circuit. Additionally, verify the wiring diagram provided with the contactor for proper connection details.
You need a step-up transformer, to go from 110 to 220-240 volts. Then a 110 volt supply can operate 240 volt equipment.
The bulb will be about half as bright.
A bright flash and a dud bulb, possibly a blown fuse instead.