Plug converter and voltage - Australia to Asia Nah, Nick!! Hate to be pedantic, but many people read these posts and plan
etc accordingly!
In fact! Most (ALL in my experience) small appliances - shavers, laptops,
radios, ipods, mobile phones, cameras etc cheerfully accept all voltages
from 100v to 250v; they're designed to do so.
Check the plug - it will ALWAYS have the voltage or voltage range
acceptable. It IS a small world!
"nick chan" <zzzxtreme@> wrote in message
news:77e09da3-8474-4563-815f-b2c83e45ce19@a9g2000prl..com...
hi , like joseph said, u don't need a voltage converter
just a universal plug type converter
electrical appliances are made for
1) 110v
2) 220-240v (mostly asia and europe)
3) 130v (japan)
so your stuff is certainly workable from 220-240 range.
On Jun 18, 7:12 am, "Bobbie Weeks (Ms)" <bwe...@emergency.qld.gov.au>
wrote:
> I live in Australia and will be travelling to Vietnam, Cambodia,
> Thailand and Malaysia later this year. I've checked out getting a
> plug converter, so I can plug my Australia appliances (like phone
> charger, laptop, hairdryer, etc) in while I'm away. I've found out
> the plug types that I need to get but I'm wondering if there would be
> an issue with the slight (well, I assume slight) variation in voltage
> (all countries have the same frequency). I've listed out below what
> I've found but can anyone advise me if the different voltages will
> make a difference or, worse yet, damage my things as it seems that
> plug converters don't change the voltage:
>
> Australia, Plug Type I, 240V
> Cambodia, Plug Type A & E, 230V
> Malaysia, Plug Type G, 240V
> Thailand, Plug Type A & E, 220V
> Vietnam, Plug Type A & C & G, 220V
>
> Any advice would be greatly appreciated. |