127v 60hz TV to 220v 50hz [closed]

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enter image description here



Hi all
I recently moved from Mexico to Portugal and brought some electronics I suspect they are multi voltage and multi frequency.
But reading the label of a Sony TV I got into doubt if it is or not multi village/frequency.
Attached a photo of the label. Can I plug this TV straight on power outlet?
My doubt is because in the center of the label says Energy Performance Verified 127v 60hz.
Thank you for any advice,
enter image description here



Hope it also applies for my Sharp one. Does it?
Thanks again







share|improve this question














closed as off-topic by Transistor, PlasmaHH, Bimpelrekkie, brhans, Harry Svensson Sep 4 at 12:16


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions on the use of electronic devices are off-topic as this site is intended specifically for questions on electronics design." – Transistor, PlasmaHH, Bimpelrekkie, brhans, Harry Svensson
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.








  • 1




    What does the fine manual say about it?
    – PlasmaHH
    Sep 4 at 10:01










  • Please don't edit your original question to add another one.
    – winny
    Sep 4 at 12:31










  • Sorry for editing.
    – Alexandre Perali
    Sep 5 at 11:18










  • In the manual doesn't say anything about voltage. But, regarding the Sharp tv I took the risk and plug it on the 240v outlet. It is working well by the way. Just for anybody else looking for the same information.
    – Alexandre Perali
    Sep 5 at 11:22
















up vote
2
down vote

favorite












enter image description here



Hi all
I recently moved from Mexico to Portugal and brought some electronics I suspect they are multi voltage and multi frequency.
But reading the label of a Sony TV I got into doubt if it is or not multi village/frequency.
Attached a photo of the label. Can I plug this TV straight on power outlet?
My doubt is because in the center of the label says Energy Performance Verified 127v 60hz.
Thank you for any advice,
enter image description here



Hope it also applies for my Sharp one. Does it?
Thanks again







share|improve this question














closed as off-topic by Transistor, PlasmaHH, Bimpelrekkie, brhans, Harry Svensson Sep 4 at 12:16


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions on the use of electronic devices are off-topic as this site is intended specifically for questions on electronics design." – Transistor, PlasmaHH, Bimpelrekkie, brhans, Harry Svensson
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.








  • 1




    What does the fine manual say about it?
    – PlasmaHH
    Sep 4 at 10:01










  • Please don't edit your original question to add another one.
    – winny
    Sep 4 at 12:31










  • Sorry for editing.
    – Alexandre Perali
    Sep 5 at 11:18










  • In the manual doesn't say anything about voltage. But, regarding the Sharp tv I took the risk and plug it on the 240v outlet. It is working well by the way. Just for anybody else looking for the same information.
    – Alexandre Perali
    Sep 5 at 11:22












up vote
2
down vote

favorite









up vote
2
down vote

favorite











enter image description here



Hi all
I recently moved from Mexico to Portugal and brought some electronics I suspect they are multi voltage and multi frequency.
But reading the label of a Sony TV I got into doubt if it is or not multi village/frequency.
Attached a photo of the label. Can I plug this TV straight on power outlet?
My doubt is because in the center of the label says Energy Performance Verified 127v 60hz.
Thank you for any advice,
enter image description here



Hope it also applies for my Sharp one. Does it?
Thanks again







share|improve this question














enter image description here



Hi all
I recently moved from Mexico to Portugal and brought some electronics I suspect they are multi voltage and multi frequency.
But reading the label of a Sony TV I got into doubt if it is or not multi village/frequency.
Attached a photo of the label. Can I plug this TV straight on power outlet?
My doubt is because in the center of the label says Energy Performance Verified 127v 60hz.
Thank you for any advice,
enter image description here



Hope it also applies for my Sharp one. Does it?
Thanks again









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Sep 4 at 11:17

























asked Sep 4 at 9:55









Alexandre Perali

112




112




closed as off-topic by Transistor, PlasmaHH, Bimpelrekkie, brhans, Harry Svensson Sep 4 at 12:16


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions on the use of electronic devices are off-topic as this site is intended specifically for questions on electronics design." – Transistor, PlasmaHH, Bimpelrekkie, brhans, Harry Svensson
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.




closed as off-topic by Transistor, PlasmaHH, Bimpelrekkie, brhans, Harry Svensson Sep 4 at 12:16


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "Questions on the use of electronic devices are off-topic as this site is intended specifically for questions on electronics design." – Transistor, PlasmaHH, Bimpelrekkie, brhans, Harry Svensson
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.







  • 1




    What does the fine manual say about it?
    – PlasmaHH
    Sep 4 at 10:01










  • Please don't edit your original question to add another one.
    – winny
    Sep 4 at 12:31










  • Sorry for editing.
    – Alexandre Perali
    Sep 5 at 11:18










  • In the manual doesn't say anything about voltage. But, regarding the Sharp tv I took the risk and plug it on the 240v outlet. It is working well by the way. Just for anybody else looking for the same information.
    – Alexandre Perali
    Sep 5 at 11:22












  • 1




    What does the fine manual say about it?
    – PlasmaHH
    Sep 4 at 10:01










  • Please don't edit your original question to add another one.
    – winny
    Sep 4 at 12:31










  • Sorry for editing.
    – Alexandre Perali
    Sep 5 at 11:18










  • In the manual doesn't say anything about voltage. But, regarding the Sharp tv I took the risk and plug it on the 240v outlet. It is working well by the way. Just for anybody else looking for the same information.
    – Alexandre Perali
    Sep 5 at 11:22







1




1




What does the fine manual say about it?
– PlasmaHH
Sep 4 at 10:01




What does the fine manual say about it?
– PlasmaHH
Sep 4 at 10:01












Please don't edit your original question to add another one.
– winny
Sep 4 at 12:31




Please don't edit your original question to add another one.
– winny
Sep 4 at 12:31












Sorry for editing.
– Alexandre Perali
Sep 5 at 11:18




Sorry for editing.
– Alexandre Perali
Sep 5 at 11:18












In the manual doesn't say anything about voltage. But, regarding the Sharp tv I took the risk and plug it on the 240v outlet. It is working well by the way. Just for anybody else looking for the same information.
– Alexandre Perali
Sep 5 at 11:22




In the manual doesn't say anything about voltage. But, regarding the Sharp tv I took the risk and plug it on the 240v outlet. It is working well by the way. Just for anybody else looking for the same information.
– Alexandre Perali
Sep 5 at 11:22










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
6
down vote













In my opinion you can safely use this TV with 240 V, 50 Hz.



The 120 V 60 Hz is in it's own section and suggests that the FCC and UL US-listed ratings are for use at 120 V 60 Hz. Since FCC and UL US are only for the US where they use 120 V, this makes sense.



The UL Nom rating is broader and applies to 110 - 240 V 50/60 Hz.



Do note that in Portugal the oldfashioned analog TV broadcasts are in PAL format while in Mexico NTSC is used. If you're lucky the TV will handle that seamlessly for you. If you use a settop box (for digital TV) and connect over HDMI then that should work fine.






share|improve this answer




















  • Thank you very much. Yes I'll use it with settop box over HDMI and also with my laptop.
    – Alexandre Perali
    Sep 4 at 11:12










  • Tried on Sony and it worked perfectly. Thank you again for your support.
    – Alexandre Perali
    Sep 4 at 11:48










  • Sorry for the off topic question. I though it was an Electrical Engineering site as the logo on top left corner.
    – Alexandre Perali
    Sep 5 at 11:25










  • Sure but just being related to/about EE is not enough, the question also needs to fit the rules: electronics.stackexchange.com/tour and your question falls in the "how to use a device" category. But since in this case the label is confusing I answered anyway.
    – Bimpelrekkie
    Sep 5 at 12:15











  • @AlexandrePerali Indeed the same applies to the Sharp device. Lots of US ratings, less for outside US. But it does say 120 - 240 V AC 50/60 Hz and that's the important line.
    – Bimpelrekkie
    Sep 5 at 12:19

















1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
6
down vote













In my opinion you can safely use this TV with 240 V, 50 Hz.



The 120 V 60 Hz is in it's own section and suggests that the FCC and UL US-listed ratings are for use at 120 V 60 Hz. Since FCC and UL US are only for the US where they use 120 V, this makes sense.



The UL Nom rating is broader and applies to 110 - 240 V 50/60 Hz.



Do note that in Portugal the oldfashioned analog TV broadcasts are in PAL format while in Mexico NTSC is used. If you're lucky the TV will handle that seamlessly for you. If you use a settop box (for digital TV) and connect over HDMI then that should work fine.






share|improve this answer




















  • Thank you very much. Yes I'll use it with settop box over HDMI and also with my laptop.
    – Alexandre Perali
    Sep 4 at 11:12










  • Tried on Sony and it worked perfectly. Thank you again for your support.
    – Alexandre Perali
    Sep 4 at 11:48










  • Sorry for the off topic question. I though it was an Electrical Engineering site as the logo on top left corner.
    – Alexandre Perali
    Sep 5 at 11:25










  • Sure but just being related to/about EE is not enough, the question also needs to fit the rules: electronics.stackexchange.com/tour and your question falls in the "how to use a device" category. But since in this case the label is confusing I answered anyway.
    – Bimpelrekkie
    Sep 5 at 12:15











  • @AlexandrePerali Indeed the same applies to the Sharp device. Lots of US ratings, less for outside US. But it does say 120 - 240 V AC 50/60 Hz and that's the important line.
    – Bimpelrekkie
    Sep 5 at 12:19














up vote
6
down vote













In my opinion you can safely use this TV with 240 V, 50 Hz.



The 120 V 60 Hz is in it's own section and suggests that the FCC and UL US-listed ratings are for use at 120 V 60 Hz. Since FCC and UL US are only for the US where they use 120 V, this makes sense.



The UL Nom rating is broader and applies to 110 - 240 V 50/60 Hz.



Do note that in Portugal the oldfashioned analog TV broadcasts are in PAL format while in Mexico NTSC is used. If you're lucky the TV will handle that seamlessly for you. If you use a settop box (for digital TV) and connect over HDMI then that should work fine.






share|improve this answer




















  • Thank you very much. Yes I'll use it with settop box over HDMI and also with my laptop.
    – Alexandre Perali
    Sep 4 at 11:12










  • Tried on Sony and it worked perfectly. Thank you again for your support.
    – Alexandre Perali
    Sep 4 at 11:48










  • Sorry for the off topic question. I though it was an Electrical Engineering site as the logo on top left corner.
    – Alexandre Perali
    Sep 5 at 11:25










  • Sure but just being related to/about EE is not enough, the question also needs to fit the rules: electronics.stackexchange.com/tour and your question falls in the "how to use a device" category. But since in this case the label is confusing I answered anyway.
    – Bimpelrekkie
    Sep 5 at 12:15











  • @AlexandrePerali Indeed the same applies to the Sharp device. Lots of US ratings, less for outside US. But it does say 120 - 240 V AC 50/60 Hz and that's the important line.
    – Bimpelrekkie
    Sep 5 at 12:19












up vote
6
down vote










up vote
6
down vote









In my opinion you can safely use this TV with 240 V, 50 Hz.



The 120 V 60 Hz is in it's own section and suggests that the FCC and UL US-listed ratings are for use at 120 V 60 Hz. Since FCC and UL US are only for the US where they use 120 V, this makes sense.



The UL Nom rating is broader and applies to 110 - 240 V 50/60 Hz.



Do note that in Portugal the oldfashioned analog TV broadcasts are in PAL format while in Mexico NTSC is used. If you're lucky the TV will handle that seamlessly for you. If you use a settop box (for digital TV) and connect over HDMI then that should work fine.






share|improve this answer












In my opinion you can safely use this TV with 240 V, 50 Hz.



The 120 V 60 Hz is in it's own section and suggests that the FCC and UL US-listed ratings are for use at 120 V 60 Hz. Since FCC and UL US are only for the US where they use 120 V, this makes sense.



The UL Nom rating is broader and applies to 110 - 240 V 50/60 Hz.



Do note that in Portugal the oldfashioned analog TV broadcasts are in PAL format while in Mexico NTSC is used. If you're lucky the TV will handle that seamlessly for you. If you use a settop box (for digital TV) and connect over HDMI then that should work fine.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Sep 4 at 10:12









Bimpelrekkie

41.8k23790




41.8k23790











  • Thank you very much. Yes I'll use it with settop box over HDMI and also with my laptop.
    – Alexandre Perali
    Sep 4 at 11:12










  • Tried on Sony and it worked perfectly. Thank you again for your support.
    – Alexandre Perali
    Sep 4 at 11:48










  • Sorry for the off topic question. I though it was an Electrical Engineering site as the logo on top left corner.
    – Alexandre Perali
    Sep 5 at 11:25










  • Sure but just being related to/about EE is not enough, the question also needs to fit the rules: electronics.stackexchange.com/tour and your question falls in the "how to use a device" category. But since in this case the label is confusing I answered anyway.
    – Bimpelrekkie
    Sep 5 at 12:15











  • @AlexandrePerali Indeed the same applies to the Sharp device. Lots of US ratings, less for outside US. But it does say 120 - 240 V AC 50/60 Hz and that's the important line.
    – Bimpelrekkie
    Sep 5 at 12:19
















  • Thank you very much. Yes I'll use it with settop box over HDMI and also with my laptop.
    – Alexandre Perali
    Sep 4 at 11:12










  • Tried on Sony and it worked perfectly. Thank you again for your support.
    – Alexandre Perali
    Sep 4 at 11:48










  • Sorry for the off topic question. I though it was an Electrical Engineering site as the logo on top left corner.
    – Alexandre Perali
    Sep 5 at 11:25










  • Sure but just being related to/about EE is not enough, the question also needs to fit the rules: electronics.stackexchange.com/tour and your question falls in the "how to use a device" category. But since in this case the label is confusing I answered anyway.
    – Bimpelrekkie
    Sep 5 at 12:15











  • @AlexandrePerali Indeed the same applies to the Sharp device. Lots of US ratings, less for outside US. But it does say 120 - 240 V AC 50/60 Hz and that's the important line.
    – Bimpelrekkie
    Sep 5 at 12:19















Thank you very much. Yes I'll use it with settop box over HDMI and also with my laptop.
– Alexandre Perali
Sep 4 at 11:12




Thank you very much. Yes I'll use it with settop box over HDMI and also with my laptop.
– Alexandre Perali
Sep 4 at 11:12












Tried on Sony and it worked perfectly. Thank you again for your support.
– Alexandre Perali
Sep 4 at 11:48




Tried on Sony and it worked perfectly. Thank you again for your support.
– Alexandre Perali
Sep 4 at 11:48












Sorry for the off topic question. I though it was an Electrical Engineering site as the logo on top left corner.
– Alexandre Perali
Sep 5 at 11:25




Sorry for the off topic question. I though it was an Electrical Engineering site as the logo on top left corner.
– Alexandre Perali
Sep 5 at 11:25












Sure but just being related to/about EE is not enough, the question also needs to fit the rules: electronics.stackexchange.com/tour and your question falls in the "how to use a device" category. But since in this case the label is confusing I answered anyway.
– Bimpelrekkie
Sep 5 at 12:15





Sure but just being related to/about EE is not enough, the question also needs to fit the rules: electronics.stackexchange.com/tour and your question falls in the "how to use a device" category. But since in this case the label is confusing I answered anyway.
– Bimpelrekkie
Sep 5 at 12:15













@AlexandrePerali Indeed the same applies to the Sharp device. Lots of US ratings, less for outside US. But it does say 120 - 240 V AC 50/60 Hz and that's the important line.
– Bimpelrekkie
Sep 5 at 12:19




@AlexandrePerali Indeed the same applies to the Sharp device. Lots of US ratings, less for outside US. But it does say 120 - 240 V AC 50/60 Hz and that's the important line.
– Bimpelrekkie
Sep 5 at 12:19


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