Forums39
Topics38,716
Posts313,095
Members26,576
|
Most Online2,218 Jan 21st, 2020
|
|
27 registered members (jazzgal, pony600, lcote, foreversxm, GeorgeC1, LINNY, road3682, jagmansr, KimberlySea, ndfaninnc, YachtReprise, Compskier, Todd_Melinda_K, KirkB, pandpfromcanada, SXMScubaman, Manpot, jbutah, xrayman67, MrEZgoin, bailau, 6 invisible),
514
guests, and 86
spiders. |
Key:
Admin,
Global Mod,
Mod
|
|
|
Re: Electric plug
[Re: Houston]
#282328
05/14/2022 08:33 AM
05/14/2022 08:33 AM
|
Joined: Feb 2011
Posts: 225 Virginia Beach, VA USA
barryvabeach
Traveler
|
Traveler
Joined: Feb 2011
Posts: 225
Virginia Beach, VA USA
|
Many appliances that have motors need the correct voltage - for that you would need a converter, not just an adaptor. For most electronics there is tiny print on it somewhere that says what it will accept and if it says 100 to 240 V 50/60 Hz, all you need is an adaptor. This label [img] https://qph.fs.quoracdn.net/main-qimg-c76295ef84c88fd72e4d7a409b8316ee-lq[/img] says that it will output 12 volts ( likely as a charger ) if plugged into an outlet that supplies anything from 100 volts to 240 volts, and will run on either 50 hz - which is what the French side has, or 60 hz, which the US uses. I have a few olders chargers for laptops that only work on 120 volt, so you will want to check the labels before you go.
|
|
|
|