You can buy an adapter that takes the European plug on one side, and provides a US 120V plug on the other side. I have such an adapter that I used for a Norelco shaver that I bought in Holland years ago.
Serious about crackers
Posts: 9760 | Location: San Diego | Registered: July 26, 2014
Originally posted by Aeteocles: You need an adapter that converts both voltage and frequency--not just a an adapter that changes the shapes of the plug.
Read the machine first and see if it works on 50 and 60 cycle Electricity. Otherwise you need a transformer. European electric is 50 cycles and American is 60 cycles. So standard things like motors usually work ok, but things with electronics will usually get fried.
50 vs. 60Hz is one issue. The other is voltage. If there's a heating element involved, and it's a coffee maker, so there's a good bet there is, it may not heat the water, or at least not very quickly.
Thus the metric system did not really catch on in the States, unless you count the increasing popularity of the nine-millimeter bullet. - Dave Barry
"Never go through life saying 'I should have'..." - quote from the 9/11 Boatlift Story (thanks, sdy for posting it)
Posts: 3374 | Location: Grapevine TX/ Augusta GA | Registered: July 15, 2007
Originally posted by Aeteocles: You need an adapter that converts both voltage and frequency--not just a an adapter that changes the shapes of the plug.
He should search for a “converter” and not an adapter. Anything called an adapter won’t convert the voltage.
Find the model number of your Senseo coffee maker, then google:
“Senseo <model number> specification”
to find the acceptable voltage and frequency ranges for power. If 110-120V at 60 Hz is in that range, then the simple plug adapter that I mentioned in my first post is all that you need.
Serious about crackers
Posts: 9760 | Location: San Diego | Registered: July 26, 2014
Originally posted by Pipe Smoker: Find the model number of your Senseo coffee maker, then google:
“Senseo <model number> specification”
to find the acceptable voltage and frequency ranges for power. If 110-120V at 60 Hz is in that range, then the simple plug adapter that I mentioned in my first post is all that you need.
Lots of electronics work just fine in Europe with just an adaptor change. Been there done that. You just need to be sure about the voltages. We all just bought new cords to plug into our laptop converters and nobody had any issues.
Remember, this is all supposed to be for fun...................