Buying Equipment Overseas.
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- KVRist
- 103 posts since 27 Jul, 2006 from Perth, Australia
I'm in Japan at the moment, and theres some great (and really cheap) music stores here.
I'm thinking of buying a synth or two here. The thing is I am from Australia and I'm wondering if the difference in voltage will fry my synth when I get back home and plug it in (the power here is 120V and aus is 250V).
Has anyone here had experience with this type of thing? How did you get around it? How did it turn out? Any advice would be great thanks!!
Koe.
I'm thinking of buying a synth or two here. The thing is I am from Australia and I'm wondering if the difference in voltage will fry my synth when I get back home and plug it in (the power here is 120V and aus is 250V).
Has anyone here had experience with this type of thing? How did you get around it? How did it turn out? Any advice would be great thanks!!
Koe.
- KVRAF
- 9600 posts since 17 Sep, 2002 from Gothenburg Sweden
On some equipment you can change the voltage it runs on. If you can't you will fry it if you connect it to the wall socket.
If you're lucky the plugs will differ so you can't make that (expensive) mistake.
What you need is a 220 to 110 volt transformer.
If you're lucky the plugs will differ so you can't make that (expensive) mistake.
What you need is a 220 to 110 volt transformer.
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- KVRist
- Topic Starter
- 103 posts since 27 Jul, 2006 from Perth, Australia
Thanks for the reply.
That sounds good. Hopefully I should be able to find a transformer back home.
That sounds good. Hopefully I should be able to find a transformer back home.
- KVRAF
- 9600 posts since 17 Sep, 2002 from Gothenburg Sweden
Some newer stuff even autodetects the voltage and runs on anything from 100 to 250 volts. But RTFM thouroughly first to make absolutley sure that is the case. It isn't common but it exists. As i said,if you mess up you'll let out the magic smoke and have one expensive boat anchor.
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- KVRist
- 461 posts since 12 Jan, 2003 from Kyoto
These days most electronics come with one of those wall-wart transformers that let the device work safely internationally. Check the label on the wall-wart; it should say something like "100-240v / 50-60Hz" in which case you're safe.
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- KVRist
- 41 posts since 25 Sep, 2004 from Argentina
or just buy a power supply in Australia... I do so in Argentina. (If the conector is nothing special of course)