2002-06-01

Here is some info that may be helpful:

http://www.walkabouttravelgear.com/ground.htm#J

Also, from my checks of various sites, all of Japan is 100 V.

>From this site:

http://kropla.com/electric2.htm

Japan 100V 50/60 Hz * Eastern Japan 50 Hz (Tokyo, Kawasaki, Sapporo,
Yokohoma, and Sendai); Western Japan 60 Hz (Osaka, Kyoto, Nagoya, Hiroshima)

 Korea, South 220V 60 Hz  *Type F likely to be found in offices and hotels.
110V power with plugs A & B was previously used but is being phased out.
Older buildings may still have this, and some hotels offer both 110V and
220V service.

John


----- Original Message -----
From: "kilopascal" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, 2002-06-01 01:31
Subject: [USMA:20300] Re: North korea


> 2002-06-01
>
> Japan is split.  Half uses 100 V @ 60 Hz and the other half uses 200 V @
50
> Hz.  I'd suspect that Japan was all 200 V @ 50 Hz before the war, but when
> they rebuilt the damaged areas, it was done with American equipment using
> 100 V.
>
> John
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Bill Potts" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Friday, 2002-05-31 23:18
> Subject: [USMA:20297] Re: North korea
>
>
> > This response is for Wizard.
> >
> > Most of Japan uses 100 V, so North and South America are not unique in
> their
> > choice of a relatively low voltage. Japanese plugs are the same as the
> U.S.
> > and Canadian ones. The kinds of appliances people take with them (e.g.,
> > hairdryers, laptop computers) when they travel work fine in Japan and
> > (obviously) don't require special plug adapters. Most portable U.S.
> > appliances can also work on 240 V, 50 Hz (e.g., hairdryers on low
setting
> > only).
> >
> > On the grounding issue, you should note that we have both 2- and 3-pin
> > plugs. The two-pin plugs tend to be on small appliances, such as
> hairdryers,
> > standard lamps, etc.
> >
> > On the 3-pin plug, the center, cylindrical pin provides true grounding.
> The
> > other pins are flat.
> >
> > With 2-pin plugs, the one that connects to the neutral side of the
supply
> is
> > wider than the other (matching the socket). The plug cannot be inserted
> the
> > wrong way. The same is true for a 3-pin plug with the grounding pin
> snapped
> > off.
> >
> > Most plugs, today, are of the molded type (i.e., integral with the
cord),
> > are very safe, and are very inexpensive.
> >
> > Appliances are not sold in the U.S. or Canada without plugs. Until
fairly
> > recently, British consumers used to have to buy the plug separately and
> > install it on the end of the power cord. Inadvertent exchanging of the
> > neutral and live connections was not unusual. Even with the grounding
pin,
> > that could lead to a dangerous situation.
> >
> > Power to U.S. and Canadian houses is 3-wire. Two are live and provide
> > full-wave 220 V AC for ovens, stoves, driers, etc. The third wire is
> > neutral. Half the house's 110 V circuits use one live, plus neutral. The
> > other half use the other live, plus neutral. The fact that the two sets
of
> > half-wave circuits are mutually 180 degrees out of phase isn't a
problem.
> >
> > The cylindrical ground sockets are not connected to the electrical
system
> at
> > all, but to true ground (typically to metal brackets on nearby copper
> water
> > pipes -- or galvanized iron pipes in older houses).
> >
> > Bill Potts, CMS
> > Roseville, CA
> > http://metric1.org [SI Navigator]
> >
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]On
Behalf
> Of
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > Sent: Friday, May 31, 2002 19:48
> > To: U.S. Metric Association
> > Subject: [USMA:20296] Re: North korea
> >
> >
> > In a message dated 2002-05-31 20:16:18 Eastern Daylight Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> > writes:
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > this shows who has the best tecnical solution!
> >
> > us plugs don't have grounding, do they?
> >
> >
> > Many do except for small items like lamps, clocks, etc.
> >
> > 240v allows for smaller wires (double voltage = half amperage, usually)
> but
> > it's more dangerous.
> >
> > 120v is the standard in all of North and South America, not just the
USA.
> I
> > think also in a few other countries.
> >
> > Carleton
> >
> >
>
>

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