Imho alien is a weird word for a hum... it literally consist of 'A Lie' - and those are usually perceived as something negative... strange/foreign maybe instead?
I'd never even contemplated the difference, and this is really weird... but to my ears the 60Hz microwave sounds like it isn't doing any cooking. The 50Hz hum is extremely distinctive and it's what I associate with the magnetron actually being on, and the 60Hz one doesn't quite have the same feel. I lose it in the background noise.
What country? I live in the United States, I know North America and most of South America are lower voltage AC 60hz, but in North America most of Canada is 120V and most of Mexico is 127V. In the United States plus those two voltages included, mixed in different regions there's also 115, and 110 volts AC. at 60hz. I know most of Brazil is also mixed with those voltages just like in the US, but also in some regions of Brazil I also heard there's higher 200V ranges in certain smaller regions of Brazil and South America alone. but they're also mostly 60hz. Kinda like how apparently, I never knew this, but The Bahamas and some parts of Puerto Rico have the same voltage as the US, but at 50hz instead.
I heard my grandma's washing machine in China. it ran with this note slightly sharper than G. Here in north America, appliances run at a note between A# and B. However, i didn't know that 50 Hz was that note sharper than G until I heard my parents snore in early 2019.
There is quite a noticeable difference between the noise of 50 and 60 Hz appliances. I am from Bangladesh (to the east of India) and so I am used to 50 Hz. Hearing 60 Hz appliances seems somewhat weird to me. I found out that Saudi Arabia uses 60 Hz. That must be why I have heard a 60 Hz air conditioner in Saudi Arabia. I don't think I have ever heard a 60 Hz microwave until I watched this video.
I have a large 50Hz clock hanging on the wall in my kitchen, and up close I can hear a hum similar to the first 10 seconds of this. Its steel case acts like an amplifier for the sound coming from the synchronous motor in it
0:30 When this played it blew my mind because it's what you hear on faulty aux connections for speakers. I'm so used to 60hz that when the 50hz appliances sounds played it felt dangerous, like they were broken.
I live in 60hz, but to me the 60hz hertz sound is less harsh, it doesn't hurt my ears as much and almost a soothing effect. 50hz doesn't have that same feel and sounds more dangerous (probably for a good reason)
@@oblivionguard2286 basically it's not the voltage that dangerous, it's the power that is dangerous. If you have 2 V with 110 A it's just the same like you have 110 V with 2 A or 220 V with 1 A
For me the 60Hz sound is more terrifying. I live in Europe and I'm used to 50Hz. Watching videos from the US with short circuits on power lines makes me thrilled all over my body. This sound is so fucking violent!
@@oblivionguard2286 In EU we also have two levels of voltage. 230V (former 220V) is used for normal stuff, that runs on single phase. You can draw up to 16 amps from a plug socket, which gives about 3,6 kW. This what you can usually get in small houses and apartment blocks. But if you want you can get all three phases, if you like to run more heavy duty devices. Three phase voltage in EU is 400V (former 380V) and here it gets serious. In houses you can draw even up to 32A from just one phase! This is 7,3 kW when you connect between each phase wire and neutral wire (you get 230V there), so it is 3x7,3kW = 22kW! But here it just starts! If you connect between each two phases (A-B, A-C, B-C) you get 400V at the same current (32A). This is almost 13kW, from one pair, so the total power is 3x13kW = almost 40kW! Just like that, in your house! I bet in all 110V countries this is unobtainable for private users. Here in EU it is, even in the apartment blocks. 3 phase system is connected into the building, but every flat gets just one phase. But if you want you can have all of them, my neighbour did that just a few days ago. However the electrical system in the building must be able to bear that extra load, so my neighbour got just 20kW (16A 3-phase breaker) from the power company. But it is more than enough to run an induction stove, instead of natural gas stove he had before (we move away from natural gas because it's price will go through the roof if Russia decides to cut the supplies for the EU, because of the war in Ukraine).
50 hz sounds more dangerous, eerie and strange, but it's because i live in a 60hz region...it's a matter of customs. But nowadays, some refrigerators and washers with digital inverter technologies, the electronic central module in order to control the motor/compressor speed, they uses frequency instead of voltage, so it's now more often to hear different cycling sounds. In my personal case, my refrigerator compressor produces a 50hz tone (despite of living on a 60hz country), but on hotter days i can hear 60 or even 85hz...
i recently visited canada and was there for a week and suddenly this voltage and frequency difference popped up on my mind when i went to microwave some food. First I noticed how their kitchen sounded weird, the fridges and the ambience itself, and when i started the microwave i instantly noticed that higher pitched whine and realized why it felt weird being in that kitchen. I grew up in a 220-240v 50hz country so therefore everything that emits that whine has become like background noise to me and is kinda relaxing to me tbh, but when i stepped into that kitchen it felt like i was constantly noticing that sound because it was foreign to me and even felt bit scared to even use the microwave the second time.
The second one from the first sound reminds me as if you would sitting in front of a crt turned on with the radio tuned on AM picking up video interference thing. I know every single one in a pal region had come across atleast once in a life time.
50 Hz locations: Europe, most of Asia, Oceania, Africa, and a few parts of South America. (In simpler words, major parts of the world.) 60 Hz locations: North America, Central America, most of South America, a few Eastern parts of Asia (e.g. South Korea, Western Japan, Phillipines, Taiwan), Saudi Arabia.
There are some errors on the map. For example Southern and insular Italy and Greece don't use 60 Hz but 50 Hz (which actually appears as well in the map), while not all of Japan uses 50 Hz since the southern half uses 60 Hz. Apart from this, thanks for this video :-)
Acá en Argentina cuando los aparatos están defectuosos como transformadores o la señal de la TV analógica se escucha la nota de sol (g) la electricidad .
Eso sería muy caro o haría un nuevo proyecto que crearía una razón para que un gobierno corrompiera. Colombia está rodeada por los países que usan 60 Hz y la mayoría de las partes de Colombia ya están electrificadas, por lo que sería costoso cambiar eso.
1:57 Sounds like that the 50 Hz one of the fridges is older than the 60 Hz one. 🤔 Ps. I live in Finland so for me 50 Hz is more familiar. However, I have never earlier seen or heard degaussing CRT monitors or their sounds.
That is called three-phase electric power. It is a common type of alternating current used in electricity generation, transmission, and distribution. It is a type of polyphase system employing three wires and is the most common method used by electrical grids worldwide to transfer power. Source: Wikipedia
I live in a 60 Hz country; in this case, the USA. Which do you like more? 50 Hz, or 60 Hz? If you choose 50 Hz, then reply/write down “I like 50 Hz more.” If you choose 60 Hz, then reply/write down “I like 60 Hz more.”
I live in a 50 Hz region, Bangladesh (to the east of India). And I am used to 50 Hz. However, even after hearing some 60 Hz appliances, I don't have a preference. I think both frequencies are fine.
60hz, at least with electric motors, is superior because the motor will spin 20% faster than it would on 50hz and will also get a Horsepower bump. So 60hz FTW
@@Rami358able I do, I live in the US so I'm around 60hz all the time. Older lights flicker less, Old CRT TVs flicker less, electric motors spin faster, and the humming is a little bit more pleasant to the ear.
Greenland is culturally european, and european countries switched to 220v 50hz in the mid 20th century due to wars and long transmission. The higher the voltage, more efficient range, less current.
@@Rami358able In Lebanon it's 50Hz but EDL likes to keep it at 50.6Hz to cope with sudden surges after connecting regions with power outages. I've monitored it and it swings between 48.8Hz-51.2Hz daily
@@Rami358able You're right. You can also notice that in the sound of the fridge compressor (regular fridge not inverter-type) or in transformers if you have an AVR that buzzes 😉
East Japan : 50Hz
West Japan : 60Hz
50 Hz appliances sound alien to me. I live in a 60 Hz country
Imho alien is a weird word for a hum... it literally consist of 'A Lie' - and those are usually perceived as something negative... strange/foreign maybe instead?
I always swore it was 60hz I my country and I didn’t notice my microwave had a lower hum than America until recently
I live in Germany (50hz 230v) and for me 60hz sounds like Alien
1:43 I actually like the sound of the compressor
well, that is probably why 50Hz sounds alien to you. idk.. just a guess 🤪
I always wondered what a microwave sounds like in 50 hertz.
Also available in 60Hz in other regions
@@intelboydj1 Yup. I live in the 60 hz region.
I'd never even contemplated the difference, and this is really weird... but to my ears the 60Hz microwave sounds like it isn't doing any cooking.
The 50Hz hum is extremely distinctive and it's what I associate with the magnetron actually being on, and the 60Hz one doesn't quite have the same feel. I lose it in the background noise.
What country? I live in the United States, I know North America and most of South America are lower voltage AC 60hz, but in North America most of Canada is 120V and most of Mexico is 127V. In the United States plus those two voltages included, mixed in different regions there's also 115, and 110 volts AC. at 60hz. I know most of Brazil is also mixed with those voltages just like in the US, but also in some regions of Brazil I also heard there's higher 200V ranges in certain smaller regions of Brazil and South America alone. but they're also mostly 60hz. Kinda like how apparently, I never knew this, but The Bahamas and some parts of Puerto Rico have the same voltage as the US, but at 50hz instead.
@@MrOrthopedia same
litterally no one:
the power amp sitting in my studio at 3am: 0:12
Western Japan uses 60 Hz.
yeah i was going to comment this too
As well as Korea and Saudi Arabia and a few others. :)
also South Korea does
I heard my grandma's washing machine in China. it ran with this note slightly sharper than G. Here in north America, appliances run at a note between A# and B. However, i didn't know that 50 Hz was that note sharper than G until I heard my parents snore in early 2019.
yes I just noticed that some appliances run at A# - roughly 57 hz
AC unit starting on 50hz is trippy
50 Hz AC (100 Hz DC) emits a tone of ‘G2,’ whereas 60 Hz AC (120 Hz DC) emits a tone of ‘B-flat 2.’
You can recognise that a standard pitch A = 440 Hz.
Just like the tuning fork works
Udit Shukla, where do you live?
@@n124ac9 I'm living in India right now (frequency=50Hz)
60hz is exactly halfway between B and B flat.
And they are a minor third apart.
Thanks for the comparison I never knew I needed
Windows Blue Screen of Death sound always hears at 50hz
LOL!!!
BSOD sound always heard at 60hz in Japanese & Indonesian version of Windows
Why not 48 or 12
YES IT DOES
There is quite a noticeable difference between the noise of 50 and 60 Hz appliances.
I am from Bangladesh (to the east of India) and so I am used to 50 Hz. Hearing 60 Hz appliances seems somewhat weird to me.
I found out that Saudi Arabia uses 60 Hz. That must be why I have heard a 60 Hz air conditioner in Saudi Arabia.
I don't think I have ever heard a 60 Hz microwave until I watched this video.
Same from bd, recently went to canada and instantly noticed this difference.
bro analyzed his entire life
I have a large 50Hz clock hanging on the wall in my kitchen, and up close I can hear a hum similar to the first 10 seconds of this. Its steel case acts like an amplifier for the sound coming from the synchronous motor in it
0:30 When this played it blew my mind because it's what you hear on faulty aux connections for speakers.
I'm so used to 60hz that when the 50hz appliances sounds played it felt dangerous, like they were broken.
I live in 60hz, but to me the 60hz hertz sound is less harsh, it doesn't hurt my ears as much and almost a soothing effect. 50hz doesn't have that same feel and sounds more dangerous (probably for a good reason)
@sort of guy? Fair point. I'm in the US and we have seperate 110v and 220v. We really only use 220v for heavy duty stuff like washing machines.
@@oblivionguard2286 basically it's not the voltage that dangerous, it's the power that is dangerous. If you have 2 V with 110 A it's just the same like you have 110 V with 2 A or 220 V with 1 A
croc𓆋𓂀 230-240v 60Hz is the most efficient system
For me the 60Hz sound is more terrifying. I live in Europe and I'm used to 50Hz. Watching videos from the US with short circuits on power lines makes me thrilled all over my body. This sound is so fucking violent!
@@oblivionguard2286 In EU we also have two levels of voltage. 230V (former 220V) is used for normal stuff, that runs on single phase. You can draw up to 16 amps from a plug socket, which gives about 3,6 kW. This what you can usually get in small houses and apartment blocks. But if you want you can get all three phases, if you like to run more heavy duty devices. Three phase voltage in EU is 400V (former 380V) and here it gets serious. In houses you can draw even up to 32A from just one phase! This is 7,3 kW when you connect between each phase wire and neutral wire (you get 230V there), so it is 3x7,3kW = 22kW! But here it just starts! If you connect between each two phases (A-B, A-C, B-C) you get 400V at the same current (32A). This is almost 13kW, from one pair, so the total power is 3x13kW = almost 40kW! Just like that, in your house! I bet in all 110V countries this is unobtainable for private users. Here in EU it is, even in the apartment blocks. 3 phase system is connected into the building, but every flat gets just one phase. But if you want you can have all of them, my neighbour did that just a few days ago. However the electrical system in the building must be able to bear that extra load, so my neighbour got just 20kW (16A 3-phase breaker) from the power company. But it is more than enough to run an induction stove, instead of natural gas stove he had before (we move away from natural gas because it's price will go through the roof if Russia decides to cut the supplies for the EU, because of the war in Ukraine).
Great video! 👍🏻👍🏻
50hz transmission/distribution voltages 765kv, 750kv, 500kv, 400kv, 330kv, 275kv, 220kv, 132kv, 110kv, 66kv, 33kv, 22kv, 11kv, 7.2kv.
60hz transmission/distribution voltages 765kv, 735kv, 500kv, 440kv, 345kv, 230kv, 138kv, 115kv, 69kv, 35kv, 25kv, 14.4kv, 10kv, 7.2kv.
I live in a 60hz country "USA" but I find the 50hz hum satisfying.
60 HZ Sounds like real Electricity
50hz sound is creepy
@@progen1140 60Hz sounds like toy electricity, weak plugs, and annoying gaming TH-camrs shouting DON’T FORGET TO LIKE AND SUBSCRIBE
50 hz sounds more dangerous, eerie and strange, but it's because i live in a 60hz region...it's a matter of customs. But nowadays, some refrigerators and washers with digital inverter technologies, the electronic central module in order to control the motor/compressor speed, they uses frequency instead of voltage, so it's now more often to hear different cycling sounds. In my personal case, my refrigerator compressor produces a 50hz tone (despite of living on a 60hz country), but on hotter days i can hear 60 or even 85hz...
50 hz sounds sadder idk why
more evil :D
@@TomekKogutah nah, just sad
'cause it's lower
i recently visited canada and was there for a week and suddenly this voltage and frequency difference popped up on my mind when i went to microwave some food. First I noticed how their kitchen sounded weird, the fridges and the ambience itself, and when i started the microwave i instantly noticed that higher pitched whine and realized why it felt weird being in that kitchen. I grew up in a 220-240v 50hz country so therefore everything that emits that whine has become like background noise to me and is kinda relaxing to me tbh, but when i stepped into that kitchen it felt like i was constantly noticing that sound because it was foreign to me and even felt bit scared to even use the microwave the second time.
I am used to 50Hz as well and that's why is it nostalgic to me
@@varganyamuvek its mellow and soothing tbh.
The applies to HID lamp ballasts too
I’ve always wondered what a microwave would sound like in 50 hz
Literally the 60 Hz buzz you’re used to, except you downpitch it by 3 semitones. You can easily do it in your head.
Same.
The second one from the first sound reminds me as if you would sitting in front of a crt turned on with the radio tuned on AM picking up video interference thing. I know every single one in a pal region had come across atleast once in a life time.
0:22 that's not a pure sine wave. I tried to generate that sound with mixing.
Where can I find the video for the 50hz air conditioner sound? I searched up "50hz air conditioner startup" and found nothing.
50 Hz locations: Europe, most of Asia, Oceania, Africa, and a few parts of South America. (In simpler words, major parts of the world.)
60 Hz locations: North America, Central America, most of South America, a few Eastern parts of Asia (e.g. South Korea, Western Japan, Phillipines, Taiwan), Saudi Arabia.
Basically 60 Hz countries are countries with major US influence or got their first generator from US company like in Western Japan
50Hz in French overseas territories, parts of Caribbean, East Japan.
Good video.👍
50 Hz 🇪🇸 220 V
Similarly 60Hz with 110V, which is the double ratio of voltage.
@@intelboydj1 There's also 60Hz with 220V in South Korea and Philippines
There are some errors on the map. For example Southern and insular Italy and Greece don't use 60 Hz but 50 Hz (which actually appears as well in the map), while not all of Japan uses 50 Hz since the southern half uses 60 Hz. Apart from this, thanks for this video :-)
Ok, i took screenshot on the other video and made perci talking about the electrical difference.
North Japan is 50 Hertz and South Japan is 60 Herts. They apparently use the same plug sockets as we do in North America, except not grounded.
I am from 50 hz country so it sounds more natural for me but I like 60 hz hum too
Watch the video to find out
Yeah 60hz motors soundike the death star firing up
I was lived in Brazil (60hz) and I changed to Italy. I carried my hair cut machine and it doesn't work here in Italy because works only on 60hz.
Okay
washing machines in 50hz sounds like a jet plane
I’m from Canada and It’s 60 hz here
I like 50Hertz humming electronic in general
The washing machine sounded like a jet engine
ɐlıǝu, did you mean both 50 and 60 Hz, or either one of them?
Both
Nice topic.
Thank u
Where do you live?
Acá en Argentina cuando los aparatos están defectuosos como transformadores o la señal de la TV analógica se escucha la nota de sol (g) la electricidad .
Actually G sharp. Here in Brazil (60Hz) the note is B. I actually understand you, but my Spanish ain't so good.
Argentina usa 50hz, por eso la afinación es "sol" (G)...yo vivo en una zona de 60hz y la afinación es próxima a "si bemol" (A#)
Wait, do NW, Middle Vietnam use the 60hz?
50hz 🇮🇶🇮🇶
The fan was the really weird one for me
Which kind of fan sound effect did you use for the fan motors? Ceiling fans or portable fans? They sounded like ceiling fans to me.
Ceiling fans use motors for supplying AC. But portable fans use DC power.
But in general, there are electric motors which can supply AC power. They are widely used in fans, blowers, and washing machines.
Ceiling fans. By testing without blades.
@@intelboydj1 I think he means the link to the source?
Wrong info. Why Laos included on 60Hz?
60hz (I live in the USA)
Ramy Fares 60Hz, Saudi Arabia
chile tambien tiene 50 hz en linea electrica
Also 60Hz... Thank you.
Why does washing machine make like a jet engine sound?
Sound of motor bearing for the spin cycle (typically front load washer)
That's actually sound of inverter controlling the engine during centrifugation
S.Korea is using 60hz. excluded s.korea 50/60hz anywhere :(
I use 50hz all of the time in my videos. Even if i have to go to audacity and pitch it down.
Make a difference of Karaoke +3 or -3.
@@intelboydj1 I use audacity so it's +16.5 -16.5, but when i use transpose, it's +3 or -3
@@infernobledsoe4267 I have Realtek HD Audio Manager to adjust karaoke pitch
Apparently, you marked Sardinia, Sicily, and Greece as using both 50 hertz and 60 hertz according to your map.
I think the whole Europe use 50 Hz because the EU regulation
@@__Man__ no. Europe used 50hz way before EU was created.
@@igorordecha ok
Why Chile 60Hz? Chile uses 220V at 50Hz but they also used NTSC and ISDB-T.
Chile used PAL N. Not NTSC.
50hz ftw
The 50hz sound is creepy. I live in 60hz country in canada
60hz i'm from brazil but I prefer 50hz
I'm also from Brazil, but the 60Hz washing machine sounds better to me. Despite that, I like the 50Hz microwave sound.
@@CANAL-en2ds i think in the same way of you.
The fluorescent light hum in the original Portal game is 60 Hz because VALVe is an American company.
OK
50 Hz 🇳🇱🇳🇱
And I really don't know how the fuck I ended up here, but pretty interesting.
Ammmmmmmmmmmmmm
*B A S S*
60hz is creepy af lol
its quite unsettling when u hear it the first time, i felt like the microwave was about to explode or something.
0:07 это фон
INternational Korean ELectrical Frequency(50/60hz)
En Colombia tenemos 60hz, me gustaría que cambiaran a 50hz
pr que amig0??
Eso sería muy caro o haría un nuevo proyecto que crearía una razón para que un gobierno corrompiera. Colombia está rodeada por los países que usan 60 Hz y la mayoría de las partes de Colombia ya están electrificadas, por lo que sería costoso cambiar eso.
1:57
Sounds like that the 50 Hz one of the fridges is older than the 60 Hz one. 🤔
Ps. I live in Finland so for me 50 Hz is more familiar. However, I have never earlier seen or heard degaussing CRT monitors or their sounds.
I live in England so I am used to 60hz [modern 3ph] and 50hz [old 3ph]
That is called three-phase electric power. It is a common type of alternating current used in electricity generation, transmission, and distribution. It is a type of polyphase system employing three wires and is the most common method used by electrical grids worldwide to transfer power.
Source: Wikipedia
@@intelboydj1 Ok
@@intelboydj1 England uses 60 hertz tho
60hz is everywhere in my country.
Namely US, Canada, Saudi Arabia, upper parts of South America, and Philippines.
is it wrong that i am obsessed with the 50Hz hum?
Watch the video and hear two different frequencies.
No, I find 50 Hertz quite satisfying. Though I always prefer washing machine at 60 Hertz.
60hz sounds a lot better
50hz sounds a lot better
50Hz= G Sharp flat, 60Hz = B flat sharp
UK(50hz)
lol the microwaves sound so weird
You should hear the Sun frequency...
What Sun? It is the largest brightest star ever!!! ☀🌞
I live in a 60 Hz country; in this case, the USA.
Which do you like more?
50 Hz, or 60 Hz?
If you choose 50 Hz, then reply/write down
“I like 50 Hz more.”
If you choose 60 Hz, then reply/write down
“I like 60 Hz more.”
50hz
I live in a 50 Hz region, Bangladesh (to the east of India). And I am used to 50 Hz.
However, even after hearing some 60 Hz appliances, I don't have a preference. I think both frequencies are fine.
60hz, at least with electric motors, is superior because the motor will spin 20% faster than it would on 50hz and will also get a Horsepower bump. So 60hz FTW
@@Rami358able I do, I live in the US so I'm around 60hz all the time. Older lights flicker less, Old CRT TVs flicker less, electric motors spin faster, and the humming is a little bit more pleasant to the ear.
@@Rami358able Okay. But we are a 240 volt country just like the rest of the world. You may not know it but we are
Imagine what 70 Hz would sound like
looks like to speed up the video or change the pitch. Actual is 50/60 Hz.
I manage to pitch shift it a little and it sounds like a ship from Star Wars
@@nathanengland9422 lol
@@nathanengland9422 ROFL!!!!
@@intelboydj1 what does that mean?
Korea/60hz
1:44
It's air conditioner startup sound at 50 Hz
Italian Frequency(50hz)
All my appliances are 50hz!!! Cuz I'm a Kuwaiti and Latino DUH!!!!
50Hz sounds like half-life
Italy/50hz
Japanese Frequency(50/60hz)
USA/60hz
What's the double frequency?
Watch the video to hear from 0:20 to 0:30, and 0:50 to 1:00.
Double Frequency = Double the cycles per hum, making it a full octave higher.
Korean Frequency(60hz)
someone turn on the 🅱️ower 🅱️witch so we can buy 🅱️uggernog
Funny block B 😂
English Frequency(50hz)
The source of the sound only 2% can hear? 🤔 aka "The World Hum"
Which do you prefer?
50hz or 60hz
50Hz
I like 60hz
@@thegamerlamp1403 okay :) then we'll take both 50 and 60 hz
50Hz 👍
50hz
Japan/50hz,60hz
American Frequency(60hz)
Why is Greenland doesn’t have 60hz when its by North America?
Greenland is culturally european, and european countries switched to 220v 50hz in the mid 20th century due to wars and long transmission. The higher the voltage, more efficient range, less current.
Greenland uses Danish standards as most of their electrical goods are supplied from Denmark or Europe. Denmark uses 50 Hz, so Greenland too
German Frequency(50hz)
Germany/50hz
Chinese Frequency(50hz)
You need to correct your map. Oman uses 50 Hz
This is the better vid:
th-cam.com/video/R3zTrWgkqis/w-d-xo.html
60 Hz🇹🇹🇹🇹
🇹🇹🇹🇹 is 🇹🇹^2 = 9.87
Use wavelength 2🇹🇹 (2 is the quantity) like sin 2🇹🇹
50Hz. I from Turkey
@@Rami358able In Lebanon it's 50Hz but EDL likes to keep it at 50.6Hz to cope with sudden surges after connecting regions with power outages. I've monitored it and it swings between 48.8Hz-51.2Hz daily
@@Rami358able if you like to monitor the fluctuations, get a digital Hz meter ;)
@@Rami358able You're right. You can also notice that in the sound of the fridge compressor (regular fridge not inverter-type) or in transformers if you have an AVR that buzzes 😉
@@Rami358able when it drops low, you can feel the fridge struggling and slowing down due to lower RPM
@@alifawaz99 dont you have problems with digital clocks?
Im Vietnamese and don't see 50hz in it
my eletric fan makes 60HZ wom wom wom wom wom vushshshshshshshshshshshshshshshshshshshs
I converted these video sources to MP3 lets you identify the frequency of each electricity flow.
China/50hz
Chile the frequency is 50 hz
i know, but now uploaded a different video with the educational system.
50hz is better
Known for two electronic frequencies 50 / 60 Hz
Taiwan will use 50hz
OK, Taiwan is a country in East Asia, officially the Republic of China (ROC).
Nope, Taiwan actually uses 60 Hz.
Chile uses 50 hz not 60 hz
I know, but in the other video.