using a desk fan in another country - why it doesn't work?

Soldato
OP
Joined
12 Feb 2006
Posts
17,257
Location
Surrey
who carries a fan with them overseas anyway

play this at 1am and you wont find it so strange ;) oddly the sound of air blowing over the ear i find soothing, and it totally drowns out all other noises, ringing being the main one.
play this now and let me know how long until your partner tells you to stop it
 
Soldato
Joined
17 Jan 2016
Posts
8,786
Location
Oldham
I think the machine as to be designed to be able to detect different power settings.

When I used to go to the US the lung function clinic give me a travel bipap. It had written on that it could change voltage. So all I needed was the plug adapters.

I noticed when I turned it on in the US the startup sequence was different.
 
Soldato
Joined
16 Aug 2009
Posts
7,773
According to here the only country that might have caused you problems is America, with a 120V 60 Hz standard. The others are all ~240V 50 Hz. Converters aren't ideal, but the missus has used hair dryer etc with them. I suspect the fan.
I think the frequency matters too at least for AC electric motors and a fan is simply a motor + rotor something designed for 50hz isn't going to be happy at 60

That is going to depend on the device.

For anything with a modern switched mode PSU it probably will (check the information label!) as most smaller ones are duel voltage 110/220 (especially anything portable), but something like a desk fan is usually running at mains voltage with the motor wired basically direct (at most a fuse and RF suppressor) so it'll either be 110v input or 220v input, so a 220v one from the EU/UK might work (albeit slowly) in the US, a US 110v one plugged straight into the 220v UK mains is likely not going to be happy and let the magic smoke out.

I've seen so many reports over the years of people plugging PSU's in and having them pop because until fairly recently whilst most PC PSU's were "duel voltage" there was often/usually (depending on when you're talking about) a selector switch that needed to be set correctly, and UK PSU's didn't always get it set right before it was packed at the factory in the English (UK) box with the UK plug.

Remember it's not just the physical shape of the connection that varies between the UK/EU and US, it's the actual voltage.
Havn't seen a manual switching PSU in a long time they're all auto switchers these days maybe the low end one still have them
 
Last edited:
Back
Top Bottom