

Don't believe me? I'll send you pictures. We have indented outlets in France, and the American bought transformer have flat plug, right prongs, but don't plug-in right because of the shape. You will rarely find a frequency modulator + voltage transformer in one package, at a store, and if you did, you wouldn't be able to afford it.ĭon't buy one at radio-shack, they have a bad design.
#WII NTSC U TV#
Run a picky 110V appliance with a 240V transformer, it will work, but you risk reducing it's life, and expect problems (ex: a 110V NTSC tube TV I ran on 240V, had massive and extremely annoying flickering) The United States' power grid runs 60Hz whereas Europe, and Oceania run 50Hz. Just make sure you buy one with 240V AC input and 10V DC output or, whatever the Wii is rated for.įor the long run, I recommend just buying a new adapter, since the voltage transformers you buy in a store (ex: radio-shack) don't modulate the frequency, which everybody seems to forget about. If the output voltage is OK, then you're fine.
#WII NTSC U PS2#
Wii, DS, PSP, Xbox 360, PS2 but I believe the PS3's is built in, it could be dual voltage, I don't know. Get a new adapter, and you are good to go.) The same goes for just about any other console. (For those who say this is wrong, the Wii is not 110v itself, but rather uses a very low DC voltage, only the power adapter is affected, it transforms 110v to let's say, 10V DC and same in Australia, just 240V to 10V DC. You can either buy a 240V-110V transformer or buy an Australian power cord.
