British Expats

British Expats (https://britishexpats.com/forum/)
-   Canada (https://britishexpats.com/forum/canada-56/)
-   -   what will work of UK electrical goods in canada (https://britishexpats.com/forum/canada-56/what-will-work-uk-electrical-goods-canada-691801/)

kiera Nov 1st 2010 8:47 am

what will work of UK electrical goods in canada
 
hi,
can anyone give me the low down on what is worth taking? i have heard some say take it and some things can be converted but not sure if this is right, someone else said something about a transformer? trying sort what can go and what i need to leave behind not made of money so every little helps. needto take what i can

iaink Nov 1st 2010 8:49 am

Re: what will work of UK electrical goods in canada
 
http://britishexpats.com/wiki/Compat...f_Goods-Canada

flipance Nov 1st 2010 9:24 am

Re: what will work of UK electrical goods in canada
 
It is not an exhaustive list but a good starting place. Things that did work for us, Laptop, Printer, Camera charger. Things that didn't work, Power tools, Drill, Circlar saw, Sander, Jig saw, Compressor. etc etc....

rich07 Nov 1st 2010 9:46 am

Re: what will work of UK electrical goods in canada
 
I have had some battery powertools that won't charge, but if attached to transformer they will. Also 1 tv needed a transformer, the other an LG worked just fine. You need to check the hertz rating to see if they will work. Any charger that says 50-60 hz should work without a transformer. I bought a new charger for my ryobi drills as uk one didn't work, they seem to work now. Have seen chargers for dewalt and Bosch in home depot as well.

kiera Nov 1st 2010 10:30 am

Re: what will work of UK electrical goods in canada
 

Originally Posted by flipance (Post 8955620)
It is not an exhaustive list but a good starting place. Things that did work for us, Laptop, Printer, Camera charger. Things that didn't work, Power tools, Drill, Circlar saw, Sander, Jig saw, Compressor. etc etc....

this is great i will let him indoors read this:thumbsup: thanks for info

kiera Nov 1st 2010 10:31 am

Re: what will work of UK electrical goods in canada
 

Originally Posted by rich07 (Post 8955663)
I have had some battery powertools that won't charge, but if attached to transformer they will. Also 1 tv needed a transformer, the other an LG worked just fine. You need to check the hertz rating to see if they will work. Any charger that says 50-60 hz should work without a transformer. I bought a new charger for my ryobi drills as uk one didn't work, they seem to work now. Have seen chargers for dewalt and Bosch in home depot as well.

thanks for this

jjanj Nov 1st 2010 2:58 pm

Re: what will work of UK electrical goods in canada
 
Hi,
Most homes have 220v supply for cookers. We built a house and asked the builder to put several 220v outlets in the house, very easily done with no complications. If you don't intend to build you can just get an electrician to install a couple of 220v outlets which should not break the bank.

Some on here will no doubt have greater technical knowledge than myself and who may offer different advice. However, I speak from my own personal experience and I personally have had no problems so far in almost 5 years of using my 240v stuff. I brought TV's, VCR, DVD, HiFi, loads of tools, small kitchen appliances, sewing machines, computers and even digital phones
Hope this helps
J

flexsingh Nov 2nd 2010 1:50 am

Re: what will work of UK electrical goods in canada
 
Will a UK PS3 work in Canada (with or without any additional devices)?

iaink Nov 2nd 2010 1:57 am

Re: what will work of UK electrical goods in canada
 

Originally Posted by jjanj (Post 8956141)
Hi,
Most homes have 220v supply for cookers. We built a house and asked the builder to put several 220v outlets in the house, very easily done with no complications. If you don't intend to build you can just get an electrician to install a couple of 220v outlets which should not break the bank.

Some on here will no doubt have greater technical knowledge than myself and who may offer different advice. However, I speak from my own personal experience and I personally have had no problems so far in almost 5 years of using my 240v stuff. I brought TV's, VCR, DVD, HiFi, loads of tools, small kitchen appliances, sewing machines, computers and even digital phones
Hope this helps
J

Interesting that a licensed contractor would do that and a building inspector would sign off on something so obviously not to code.

People should be aware that 220V here has no neutral line, both black and red are "hot" relative to ground, so you are effectively removing one layer of protection. Its not necessarily a problem, just something to think about.

iaink Nov 2nd 2010 1:58 am

Re: what will work of UK electrical goods in canada
 

Originally Posted by flexsingh (Post 8957157)
Will a UK PS3 work in Canada (with or without any additional devices)?

:rolleyes:
http://britishexpats.com/wiki/Compat...les_using_a_TV
Change lead, plug into TV via HDMI, bobs your uncle

MikeUK Nov 2nd 2010 2:12 am

Re: what will work of UK electrical goods in canada
 

Originally Posted by iaink (Post 8957178)
Interesting that a licensed contractor would do that and a building inspector would sign off on something so obviously not to code.

You can install a 220v socket and still meet code,

Sticking a North American plug on a UK appliance and plugging it in with out understanding the implications of the circuit..

Well lets just say that 50% of the population are one the other side of the bell curve

flexsingh Nov 2nd 2010 2:14 am

Re: what will work of UK electrical goods in canada
 

Originally Posted by iaink (Post 8957186)
:rolleyes:
http://britishexpats.com/wiki/Compat...les_using_a_TV
Change lead, plug into TV via HDMI, bobs your uncle

No need for a transformer of some sort then? If not then greattt! :)

iaink Nov 2nd 2010 2:18 am

Re: what will work of UK electrical goods in canada
 

Originally Posted by flexsingh (Post 8957213)
No need for a transformer of some sort then? If not then greattt! :)

Is the wiki not clear?

Originally Posted by wiki
PS3's have an internal power converter so a new 110v 'kettle' lead is all you need.


iaink Nov 2nd 2010 2:20 am

Re: what will work of UK electrical goods in canada
 

Originally Posted by MikeUK (Post 8957210)
Well lets just say that 50% of the population are one the other side of the bell curve

LOL, why does it seem like so much more than 50%?

Arent all the 220V outlets here 4 prong?

flexsingh Nov 2nd 2010 2:25 am

Re: what will work of UK electrical goods in canada
 
No it's not.
"Consoles using a TV
To use these types of gaming consoles you need to purchase a step up voltage converter."
Although further on it does read to use the kettle cable and your good.


All times are GMT -12. The time now is 1:01 pm.

Powered by vBulletin: ©2000 - 2026, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.