long@sask.UUCP (Warren Long) (03/27/86)
<line eater> I have a friend who is going to Australia for his sabbatical. He will be taking a Macintosh with him. Since the Macintosh has a built-in monitor, and the power requirements are '120v, 50-60Hz', I assume that he will be able to use the machine down under, if he uses a transformer. The Macintosh should work with the 50 cycles. Am I correct??? Part 2: He also an Atari 800 which he will also be taking. The problem is much trickier: Using a TV: -if he takes a standard colour TV, it will not work as a TV cuz the broadcast companies use a different format. PAL, I think, but different from Britain. -it probably won't work as monitor for the computer using the RF output, cuz the TV is designed to work on 60Hz, not at 50Hz. -if he buys an Australian TV it will most defineately not accept the RF signal from the Atari. -I assume that if he takes a TV from here, that is capable of using batteries, ie converts the AC to DC before using it in any way, he should have no problems. The TV however will still be useless as a reciever of TV broadcasts. Using a monitor: -if he takes a monitor(eg. green screen) and drives it with the direct video signal, but has to plug it into 50Hz, will it work?? -if he buys a monitor in Australia, will it work with the signals that the Atari 800 puts out?? -is there an analog to the 'battery-driven' TV for monitors?? I am interested in any and all replies, comments, suggestions, Thank you, Warren Long University of Saskatchewan Canada
mf1@ukc.ac.uk (Michael Fischer) (03/31/86)
,. I have used North American computers overseas for several years in varying conditions, with only failure a recent Macintosh power supply, I assume is Mac's fault. Otherwise performance was perfect. I used C<64, Vic-20, and Apple2+ with assorted NTST and PAL sets and composite monitors. NTST sets and monitors work fine, with a faint flicker in Pakistan, but I think this was due to a 2hz sub-frequency on power line. With PAL, the picture loses all color, and is rather squat, as there are 625 scan lines on PAL and 525 on NTST, leaving a large blank space at top and bottom. Sound carriers on RF mod. vanish also. However the B/W picture is sharp, if squat. I don't know what RGB would do. Michael Fischer Lecturer in Social Anthropology and Computing seismo!mcvax!ukc!mf1
jhs@MITRE-BEDFORD.ARPA (04/02/86)
Power transformers designed for 60 Hz power may overheat when run on 50 Hz because they don't have enough iron in them and their "leakage inductance" isn't high enough. This might account for a power supply failure, especially if the manufacturer was trying to cut costs in the transformer department. -John Sangster jhs@mitre-bedford.arpa ...ihnp4!linus!mbunix!jhs