Hi Experts
I have an Energizer 4-unit AA or AAA battery charger that was designed for
220-240V 50 Hz, 7 watts.What would happen if I used it on 230V 60 Hz?
TIA
RF
Hi Experts
I have an Energizer 4-unit AA or AAA battery charger that was designed for
220-240V 50 Hz, 7 watts.What would happen if I used it on 230V 60 Hz?
TIA
RF
Should work fine.
No problemo.
Nothing bad ! The voltages and frequencies are so close as not to make any difference ! In any case the secondary side regulators will easily compensate for any small differences.
-- Baron:
But where are you finding 230v at 60Hz?
The difference in frequency won't matter, since the charger isn't something that makes use of the frequency and it's a small enough shift that it isn't likely to bother operation.
But a shift in voltage would affect things, and you do need to make sure that it's not just the frequency that is different, but that the voltage remains the same.
If you try to run it off 120v, it likely won't work, and that's the voltage often associated with 60Hz.
Michael
He clearly stated 230 volts.
He can. It will handle up to 288 VAC at 60 cycle without damaging the transformer. Other parts may not be so lucky.
In america!
Every house in America has 230 volts +- . Your electric dryer and electric range all are nominal 230 volts.
Actually most all are 208/240. 240 is used for split 120/240 systems, and in apartments you usually get 208/120 3 phase.
If this is an el-cheapo non-intelligent charger, it may happen that the accus are only charged to about 83%.
Background: These chargers apply a given current over a fixed time (ususally 14 h). The time is frequently determined by a counter that is driven by the 50-Hz line signal.
Cheers + HTH,
- Joerg
-- joerg dot hau at swissonline dot ch * Lausanne, Switzerland http://homepage.sunrise.ch/mysunrise/joerg.hau/ "All standard disclaimers apply". remove the obvious from my address to reply
Quite correct Ray.
Thank you all for the inputs.
RF
electric
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