world electric guide

world electric guide


World Electric Guide for Emergency lights
The table below summarizes information on the electrical systems in use in most countries of the world.

World Electric Guide for Emergency lights

The electric power frequency is shown in the number of hertz (cycles per second). Even if voltages are similar, a 60-hertz clock or tape recorder may not function properly on 50 hertz current.All systems described here usealternating current (AC).

COUNTRY
VOLTAGE FREQUENCY PLUG COMMENTS
Afghanistan
220V 50 Hz C & F * * A UN correspondent reports C and F common in Kabul, but its likely a variety of plugs may be used around the country. Some sources report Type D also in use. Other reports indicate voltage variances from 160V to 280V.
Albania
220V* 50 Hz C & F *Voltage variations common
Algeria
230V 50 Hz C* & F *A variation of Type C with a ground post offset about 1/2-inch from center may also be found.
American Samoa
120V 60 Hz A, B, F & I
Andorra
230V 50Hz C & F
Angola
220V 50 Hz C
Anguilla
110V 60Hz A (maybe B)
Antigua
230V* 60 Hz A & B *Airport area is reportedly Antigua power is 110V.
Argentina
220V 50 Hz C & I* *Neutral and line wires are reversed from that used in Australia and elsewhere.
Armenia
220V 50 Hz C & F
Aruba
127V* 60 Hz A, B & F *Lago Colony 115V
Australia
230V* 50 Hz I *Outlets typically controlled by adjacent switch.
Though nominal voltage has been officially changed to 230V, 240V is within tolerances and commonly found.
Austria
230V 50 Hz C, F
Azerbaijan
220V 50 Hz C, F
Azores
220V* 50 Hz B, C, & F *Ponta Delgada 110V; to be converted to 220V
Bahamas
120V 60 Hz A & B
Bahrain
230V* 50 Hz* G *Awali 110V, 60 Hz
Balearic Islands
220V 50 Hz C & F
Bangladesh
220V 50 Hz A, C, D, G & K
Barbados
115V 50 Hz A, B
Belarus
220V 50 Hz C & F
Belgium
230V 50 Hz E Notes from correspondents: a ‘C’ style plug can be used with ‘E’ and ‘F’ receptacles. All double-insulated appliances are indeed fitted with a ‘C’ plug, and can be used in any compatible receptacle (C E F and narrow L). Type C receptacles are prohibited in Belgium.
Belize
110/220V 60 Hz B & G
Benin
220V 50 Hz E
Bermuda
120V 60 Hz A & B
Bhutan
230V 50 Hz D, F, & G Type M plugs also identified by some sources.
Bolivia
220/230V* 50 Hz A & C *La Paz & Viacha 115V
Bosnia
220V 50 Hz C & F
Botswana
231V 50 Hz G & M
Brazil
110/220V* 60 Hz A & B, C *127V found in states of Bahia, Paran?(including Curitiba), Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo and Minas Gerais (though 220V may be found in some hotels). Other areas are 220V only, with the exception of Fortaleza (240V). Outlets are often a combination of type A and C and can accept either type plug.
Brunei
240V 50 Hz G
Bulgaria
230V 50 Hz C* & F* *Outlets are reported as type F, though both type C and F plugs may be encountered.
Burkina Faso
220V 50 Hz C & E
Burundi
220V 50 Hz C & E
Cambodia
230V 50 Hz A & C* *Some outlets are a combination of type A and C and can accept either type plug. Plug G may be found in some hotels.
Cameroon
220V 50 Hz C, E
Canada
120V 60 Hz A & B
Canary Islands
220V 50 Hz C, E, & L Type L plugs/outlets may have different pin spacing. The smaller and closer pins are for a rated current of 10 A, the bigger and wider pins are for a rated current of 16 A.
Cape Verde
220V 50 Hz C & F
Cayman Islands
120V 60 Hz A & B
Central African Republic
220V 50 Hz C & E
Chad
220V 50Hz D, E & F
Channel Islands
230V 50 Hz G
Chile
220V 50 Hz C & L
China, People’s Republic of
220V 50 Hz A, I, G The “official” plug type is like type A but slightly shorter and without holes in blades. Type A and I outlets are common, and Type G might also be found.
Colombia
110V 60Hz A& B
Comoros
220V 50 Hz C & E
Congo, People’s Rep. of
230V 50 Hz C & E
Congo, Dem. Rep. of (former Zaire)
220V 50 Hz C& D
Cook Islands
240V 50 Hz I
Costa Rica
120V 60 Hz A& B
Côte d’Ivoire
(Ivory Coast)
220V 50 Hz C & E
Croatia
230V 50Hz C& F
Cuba
110/220V 60Hz A& B, C,
F& L
Most older hotels 110V. Some newer hotels 220V. Some outlets are a combination of type A and C and can accept either type plug.
Cyprus
240V 50 Hz G
Czech Republic
230V 50 Hz E
Denmark
230V 50 Hz C& K Denmark’s connectors have slight differences from those used elsewhere. While pin diameter and spacing is standard, outlets may have different housing depths which could interfere with standard adaptors — one report says this is due to “childproofing.”Also, Plug C fits into K-type outlets (but not vice versa).
Djibouti
220V 50 Hz C& E
Dominica
230V 50 Hz D & G
Dominican Republic
110V 60 Hz A Type J may exist in some hotels.
East Timor
220V 50 Hz C, E, F, I, A UN correspondent reports “power is poor in the country with frequent brownouts and blackouts. I suspect that surges are frequent as we go through a lot of surge-protecting power bars.” Further he reports than Type I is common as much construction is done by Australians; type C is common in building built during Indonesian occupation; type E is less common; type F is common in offices but not hotels.
Ecuador
120-127V 60 Hz A& B
Egypt
220V 50 Hz C
El Salvador
115V 60 Hz A& B, C, D, E, F, G, I, J, & L
England (See United Kingdom)
Equatorial Guinea
220V* 50 Hz C& E *Voltage varies between 150 & 175V with frequent outages
Eritrea
230V 50 Hz C
Estonia
230V 50 Hz F Type C may be found in older buildings. Type E plugs may work in either C or F type outlets.
Ethiopia
220V 50 Hz D,J, & L
Faeroe Islands
220V 50 Hz C& K
Falkland Islands
240V 50 Hz G
Fiji
240V 50 Hz I
Finland
230V 50 Hz C& F
France
230V 50 Hz E Type C plugs may be found on some appliances, and will fit the Type E outlet. Type C outlets may be found in older buildings. Type A may be found in older buildings but is illegal.
French Guiana
220V 50 Hz C, & E
Gaza
230V 50 Hz H
Gabon
220V 50 Hz C
Gambia
230V 50 Hz G
Germany
230V 50 Hz C& F
Ghana
230V 50 Hz D & C
Gibraltar
240V 50 Hz C& G
Great Britain (See United Kingdom)
Greece
220V 50 Hz C, D, E & F
Greenland
220V 50 Hz C & K
Grenada (Windward Is.)
230V 50 Hz G
Guadeloupe
230V 50 Hz C, D&E
Guam
110V 60Hz A & B
Guatemala
120V 60 Hz A, B, G, & I
Guinea
220V 50 Hz C, F & K
Guinea-Bissau
220V 50 Hz C
Guyana
240V* 60 Hz* A, B, D& G *Inside the capital city of Georgetown, both 120V and 240V at either 50 or 60Hz are found, depending on the part of the city (50Hz most common). Actual voltage may vary from area to area.
Haiti
110V 60 Hz A & B
Honduras
110V 60 Hz A & B
Hong Kong
220V* 50 Hz G, M Type M replaced by Type G but still found.
Hungary
230V 50 Hz C&F
Iceland
220V 50 Hz C&F
India
230V 50 Hz C& D
Indonesia
127/230V* 50 Hz C, F& G *Conversion to 230V in progress; complete in principal cities
Iran
230V 50 Hz C
Iraq
230V 50 Hz C, D, & G
Ireland (Eire)
230 50 Hz G Type F once common and may be occasionally found.
Isle of Man
240V 50 Hz C&G
Israel
230V 50 Hz H &C *Many (but not all) modern electric outlets in Israel have larger holes that accept both Type H and C plugs. Some extension cords and older outlets accept only the Type H plug. One correspondent estimates a 50-70% chance that a randomly selected outlet will accept Type C.
Italy
230V 50 Hz C, E, F & L Type L plugs/outlets may have different pin spacing. The smaller and closer pins are for a rated current of 10 A, the bigger and wider pins are for a rated current of 16 A. Both kinds are currently used and comply to the relevant Italian (CEI) regulations. Some outlets have overlapping holes to accept either older or newer types.
Ivory Coast (See Côte d’Ivoire)
Jamaica
110V 50 Hz A & B
Japan
100V 50/60 Hz* A, B *Eastern Japan 50 Hz (Tokyo, Kawasaki, Sapporo, Yokohoma, and Sendai); Western Japan 60 Hz (Osaka, Kyoto, Nagoya, Hiroshima)
Jordan
230V 50 Hz D, F, G & J* *Type C may be found in some hotels.
Kenya
240V 50 Hz G
Kazakhstan
220V 50 Hz C
Kiribati
240V 50 Hz
Korea, South
220V 60 Hz C&F* *Type F likely to be found in offices and hotels. 110V power with plugs A & B was previously used but is being phased out. Older buildings may still have this, and some hotels offer both 110V and 220V service.
Kuwait
240V 50 Hz C& G
Laos
230V 50 Hz A, B, C, E & F
Latvia
220V 50 Hz C & F
Lebanon
110/220V 50 Hz A, B, C, D & G
Lesotho
220V 50 Hz M
Liberia
120V 60 Hz A& B
Libya
127V* 50 Hz D *Barce, Benghazi, Derna, Sebha & Tobruk 230V
Lithuania
220V 50 Hz C & F
Liechtenstein
230V 50 Hz J
Luxembourg
220V 50 Hz C & F
Macau
220V 50 Hz D & G
Macedonia
220V 50 Hz C & F
Madagascar
127/220V 50 Hz C, D, E, J & K
Madeira
220V 50 Hz C & F
Malawi
230V 50 Hz G
Malaysia
240V 50 Hz G
Maldives
230V 50 Hz A, D, G, J ,K& L
Mali
220V 50 Hz C & E
Malta
240V 50 Hz G
Martinique
220V 50 Hz C , D, & E
Mauritania
220V 50 Hz C
Mauritius
230V 50 Hz C &G
Mexico
127V 60 Hz A & B
Micronesia (Federal States of)
120V 60 Hz A & B
Monaco
127/220V 50 Hz C, D, E F
Mongolia
230V C & E
Montserrat (Leeward Is.)
230V 60 Hz A & B
Morocco
127/220V* 50 Hz C & E *Conversion to 220V only underway
Mozambique
220V 50 Hz C , F& M* *Type M found especially near the border with South Africa, including the capitol, Maputo.
Myanmar (formerly Burma)
230V 50 Hz C , D, F& G* Type G* found primarily in better hotels. Also, many of major
hotels chains are said to have multipurpose outlets, which will take Australian 3-pin plugs and perhaps other types.
Namibia
220V 50 Hz D
Nauru
240V 50 Hz I
Nepal
230V 50 Hz C&D
Netherlands
230V 50 Hz C&F
Netherlands Antilles
127/220V* 50 Hz A, B, & F *St. Martin 120V 60 Hz; Saba &(St. Eustatius 110V 60 Hz A, maybe B
New Caledonia
220V 50 Hz F
New Zealand
230V 50 Hz I
Nicaragua
120V 60 Hz A
Niger
220V 50 Hz A, B,C,D, E & F
Nigeria
240V 50 Hz D& G
Northern Ireland (see United Kingdom)
Norway
230V 50 Hz C & F
Okinawa
100V* 60 Hz A, B & I *Military facilities 120V
Oman
240V* 50 Hz G *Voltage variations common
Pakistan
230V 50 Hz C & D
Palmyra Atoll
120V 60Hz A& B
Panama
110V* 60 Hz A, B *Panama City 120V
Papua New Guinea
240V 50 Hz I
Paraguay
220V 50 Hz C
Peru
220V* 60 Hz* A, B & C *Talara 110/220V; Arequipa 50 Hz
Philippines
220V* 60 Hz A, B , C
Poland
230V 50 Hz C& E
Portugal
220V 50 Hz C& F
Puerto Rico
120V 60 Hz A& B
Qatar
240V 50 Hz D & G
Réunion Island
220V 50Hz E
Romania
230V 50 Hz C & F
Russian Federation
220V 50 Hz C A correspondent notes: “Plug type E can also be used (because the mains outlets do not have the protruding pin). Plug type F can sometimes be used but with reservation because in many places the mains outlet will not allow to connect such plug as the outlets have smaller hole diameters than F-plug pins.
Rwanda
230V 50 Hz C & J
St. Kitts and Nevis (Leeward Is.)
230V 60 Hz D & G
St. Lucia (Windward Is.)
240V 50 Hz G
St. Vincent (Windward Is.)
230V 50 Hz A, C, E, G, I & K
Saudi Arabia
127/220V 60 Hz A, B, F & G
Scotland (See United Kingdom)
Senegal
230V 50 Hz C, D, E & K
Serbia-Montenegro
220V 50 Hz C& F
Seychelles
240V 50 Hz G
Sierra Leone
230V 50 Hz D & G
Singapore
230V 50 Hz G Type A adaptors are widely available from shops as an extension set of 2 to 5 sets of sockets; most commonly used for audio and video equipment.
Slovak Republic
230V 50 Hz E
Slovenia
220V 50 Hz C& F
Somalia
220V* 50 Hz C *Berbera 230V; Merca 110/220V
South Africa
220/230V* 50 Hz M** *Grahamstad & Port Elizabeth 250V; also found in King Williams
** Types C & G can also be found in some areas.
Spain
230V 50 Hz C& F
Sri Lanka
230V 50 Hz D
Sudan
230V 50 Hz C& D
Suriname
127V 60 Hz C& F
Swaziland
230V 50 Hz M
Sweden
230V 50 Hz C& F
Switzerland
230V 50 Hz J Type C plugs are common on appliances, and will fit the Type J outlet.
Syria
220V 50 Hz C, E, & L
Tahiti
110/220V 60 Hz A, B, E Information is based mainly on hotel experiences reported by travelers.
Tajikistan
220V 50 Hz C& I
Taiwan
110V 60 Hz A, B
Tanzania
230V 50 Hz D & G
Thailand
220V 50 Hz A& C* *Some outlets are a combination of type A and C and can accept either type plug.
Togo
220V* 50 Hz C *Lome 127V
Tonga
240V 50 Hz I
Trinidad & Tobago
115V 60 Hz A & B
Tunisia
230V 50 Hz C& E
Turkey
230V 50 Hz C&F
Turkmenistan
220V 50 Hz B&F
Uganda
240V 50 Hz G
Ukraine
220V 50 Hz C
United Arab Emirates
220V* 50 Hz C, D & G
United Kingdom
230V* 50 Hz G *Outlets typically controlled by adjacent switch.
Though nominal voltage has been officially changed to 230V, 240V is within tolerances and commonly found.
United States of America
120V 60 Hz A & B
Uruguay
220V 50 Hz C, F, I* & L Type F becoming more common as a result of computer use. *Neutral and line wires are reversed from that used in Australia and elsewhere.
Uzbekistan
220V 50 Hz C& I
Vanuatu
230V 50 Hz I Some Type G may linger from British Colonial period, but are a rarity.
Venezuela
120V 60 Hz A & B
Vietnam
127/220V* 50 Hz A, C& G *To be standardized at 220V. Type G found in newer hotels, primarily those built by Singaporean and Hong Kong developers.
Virgin Islands (British and U.S.)
110V 60 Hz A & B
Wales (See United Kingdom)
Western Samoa
230V 50 Hz I
Yemen, Rep. of
220/230V 50 Hz A, D& G
Yugoslavia (Former)
220V 50 Hz C & F
Zambia
230V 50 Hz C, D & G
Zimbabwe
220V 50 Hz D & G
Emergency Light Plug
A:

plugA world electric guide
plugA
B:

plugB world electric guide
plugB
C:

plugC world electric guide
plugC
This is a plug with two flat parallel prongs. It is used in North America (United States) and in many other countries including Canada, Mexico, Guatemala, Jamaica and Venezuela. This is a plug with two flat parallel prongs with a grounding pin. It is used in the same areas as plug A. This plug is ungrounded and has two round prongs and can be used in most of the countries in continental Europe, & also widely used in South Africa.
D:

plugD world electric guide
plugD
E:

plugE world electric guide
plugE
F:

plugF world electric guide
plugF
This plug is the old British Standard and is used almost exclusively in India & also in wide usage in South Africa. This plug has three larger round pins in a triangular pattern. Plug E is similar to C except it is round and has the addition of a female contact to accept the grounding pin in the socket. This is primarily used in France and Belgium. Plug E is similar to C except it is round and has the addition of two grounding clips on the side of the plug. This is refered to as “Schuko”style and is used in Germany, Austria, the Netherlands, Sweden and Norway.
G:

plugG world electric guide
plugG
H:

plugH world electric guide
plugH
I:

plugI world electric guide
plugI
This plug has three prongs (two flat and one rectangular) that form a triangle, and is widely used in Great Britain. Primarily used in Australia, this plug has two flat prongs like the type A plug, but they form a V-shape rather than being parallel
like A plugs.
This is the grounded version of the Australian plug, this plug has two flat prongs like the type B plug, but they form a V-shape rather than being parallel like B plugs.
J:

plugJ world electric guide
plugJ
K:

plugK world electric guide
plugK
L:

plugL world electric guide
plugL
This plug is similar to I, but not compatible. It is used exclusively in Isreal. Plug K is similar to C except it is round and has the addition of a grounding pin This is primarily used in Denmark. Plug L is similar to C except it has the addition of a grounding pin This is primarily used in Switzerland.
M:

plugM world electric guide
plugM

Plug M is similar to C except it has the addition of a center grounding pin This is primarily used in Italy.

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