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I have a digital alarm clock that I bought in Canada and brought it to Europe. It's 110 Volts and 60 Hertz, like most appliances over there. I was just curious if I could get an electrician to rewire it inside to be able to operate on 240 Volts and 50 Hertz. I wouldn't go through all the trouble to get it rewired, but I really like the clock.

2007-02-26 10:23:08 · 7 answers · asked by DivinityOfFreedom 1 in Consumer Electronics Other - Electronics

I'm more interested to get the frequency changed, because it's operating at about 5/6 the (10 min each hour) normal speed (according to my research), which means I'll be constantly late.

2007-02-26 10:36:50 · update #1

7 answers

The clock keeps time by counting the power cycles. This means it will always run 50 minutes for every hour. Converting the voltage from 110 to 240 won't help this problem. It is highly unlikely that you can do anything internally to adjust it to 50 Hz. It's time to buy a clock designed for 240 V and 50 Hz.

2007-02-26 16:32:00 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Your idea sounds nice as far you are concerned but not very feaseable as it would cost you more to rewire than the clock is worth . To do this means you would have to change the motor and any other electrical parts that are compatible to 110 vac 60 hz . The other alternative is to get a step down transformer but than it may not keep good time as Europe is 50 cycle . What does this clock do for you that you are so in love with it ? Just buy a new one that has the same features and forget it . Save the one that is 60 cycle for when you come back to the states

2007-02-26 10:39:13 · answer #2 · answered by ajkastun 1 · 0 0

Many digital clocks actually count the power cycles for the time instead of using a crystal oscillator (it's more accurate over a long time period). Unfortunately, that's what yours is doing, so the electrician can't help you. You'd have to have the circuits inside the clock redesigned, or at least reconfigured for your new 50 Hz.

Time for a new clock...

2007-02-26 11:03:19 · answer #3 · answered by sd_ducksoup 6 · 0 0

Why dont you buy a converter for your clock? That would be cheaper and easy to install.

"For use with travel appliances like Razors, Radios, Shavers etc. Converts 240 volt electricity down to 120 volt US electricity to use appliances in UK, Ireland, S. Africa Built-in 3 prong UK plug (output) 2 prong flat US type socket 50 watt ... "

2007-02-26 10:32:52 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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2016-12-14 06:27:39 · answer #5 · answered by sickels 4 · 0 0

You could, but it would probably be better if you just bought a converter/transformer (there only about $20).

2007-02-26 10:31:40 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yeah. Just wire it to you clothes dryer.. I'm sure it's the same voltage.

2007-02-26 10:30:36 · answer #7 · answered by xjaz1 5 · 0 0

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