TV and DVD Players in Europe

eannd

Member
I am planning a move to France and feeling a little overwhelmed at the potential expense of getting rid of all of my U.S. electronics equipment and buying European stuff. So my plan is to buy some adapters and slowly go about the process of buying new European electronics as the budget permits.

I understand, that even with adapters, U.S. televisions don't work abroad, something about broadcast signals. Apparently, DVD players do work with adapters. Does anyone know if, with an adapter, I could use my U.S. television just to play DVDs?

Thanks in advance.
 
Hi,

I don't know if I have the answer to your question or not. I was in Austria for 6 months. I had a tv and DVD player provided to me. Some issues I ran into:

1. There was no US television show - not sure if you are talking about shows or the actual tv. I had satellite TV and still there were only a few channels in English.

2. DVD's purchased in Europe will not play in a US DVD player and vice versa unless you have a universal DVD player that does not look at region codes. I had to watch any US purchased DVD's on my laptop.

I would think if you bring with your US television and US dvd player and get an adapter you could watch the US dvd's on your tv.

My computer worked great with an adapter.

Good luck!

Winter
 
Winter (or anyone who has lived/lives in Europe),

I'm also getting ready to move to Europe. Germany to be specific. I was wondering about the cost of adapters. Do they make adapters for larger equipment (ie my treadmill)? I'm so confused as to what to take over there as far as electronics go. I'm wondering if we should just put our televisions and DVD players in storage (the army stores things that you don't want to take), and just buy new when we get there. And how do you know if you even have a universal DVD player to begin with?

Thanks,
carolyn
 
Hi Carolyn,

I bought an adapter for my computer for 10 Euros. For some reason I have in the back of my mind that the voltage is different but it works ok with a lap top because the laptop has a regulator.

Anyway - I think you could do a search on google to get more information.

Your DVD player may have something about the region code in your owners manual. It really is a pain. I probably wouldn't lug your DVD player over there unless you are bringing movies from the states.

If you buy one in Europe it will only play DVD's purchased in Europe. Same if you rent movies.

Here are a few links that may help:
http://www.slowtrav.com/europe/electronics.htm
http://www.220-electronics.com/

You can buy a region code free dvd player. Here is one site that sells them - they may have some more explanation on how to know if your current dvd player is code free.
http://www.dvdcity.com/

Good luck!
 
This is a subject that I know a lot about, having moved from the US to the UK nearly 4 years ago!

First of all, the voltage is different in Europe - usually 220 volts, vs. 110 for North America. The hertz are also different. This means that unless they are dual voltage (computers usually are - you can check by looking for a 110/220 V rating on the appliance where the electrical info is displayed) your appliances will need both transformers (to convert the voltage and hertz) and adapters (for plug conformations.) If they are dual voltage, then you will only need plug adapters. Most computers and computing type equipment are now dual voltage. Most other appliances are not dual voltage. Don't try to use just a plug adapter to plug a 110V appliance into a 220V socket - the appliance will blow up! A friend of mine learnt this the hard way.

Transformers are very expensive, especially for larger appliances, and tend to burn out appliances much, much sooner than they would otherwise wear out. I've had electricians tell me that transformers are a waste of money when bringing US appliances to Europe. They are not cost-effective! They are also pretty hard to find - you can't just walk into an electronics shop and get them - you have to go to specialty retailers or order online. I know it seems like an overwhelming cost, but you really will be better off in the long run either selling your US appliances, or putting them in storage. Buy European appliances as needed. You'd be surprised at what you don't need right away.

Televisions - you're nearly right - a US tv won't work in Europe, even if you have an electrical transformer. US tvs use NTSC format, European use PAL. A US tv won't be able to receive European signals, in any format (terrestrial, digital or satellite.)

A US tv would work with a US dvd player (both on transformers) to play-back dvds. BUT, you can buy multi-regions DVD players pretty inexpensively now in Europe, which will play DVDs from any world region. For videos, just look for a video-player marked 'NTSC playback' which is also pretty common (if you can find a video player anymore, LOL!) I've not had any problems playing US DVDs or videos here, using these kind of players. If you do bring a US DVD player over and buy a transformer for it it will only play US dvds (unless it is already a multi-region player.) I'm not sure if it will work with a European TV or not.

I know it seems overwhelming right now! E-mail me if you have any questions [email protected] .

I'm in the same boat now, but in reverse - we are going to have to sell all our UK electronics, because to have them work in the US would be a waste of money and time! C'est la vie - a small price to pay for the experience of living abroad. Good luck and have fun!
 
>Winter (or anyone who has lived/lives in Europe),
>
>I'm also getting ready to move to Europe. Germany to be
>specific. I was wondering about the cost of adapters. Do they
>make adapters for larger equipment (ie my treadmill)? I'm so
>confused as to what to take over there as far as electronics
>go. I'm wondering if we should just put our televisions and
>DVD players in storage (the army stores things that you don't
>want to take), and just buy new when we get there. And how do
>you know if you even have a universal DVD player to begin
>with?
>
>Thanks,
>carolyn
>
>
A transformer for a treadmill would be very expensive! And would also probably burn out the motor (see my other post.) I'd put your electronic stuff in storage - that's what we did.

A 'universal' DVD player is more commonly known as a 'multi-region' or 'region-free' DVD player. It will usually say somewhere in the model's specs. Unless it is a very new player, most players bought in the US are not multi-region - it's not very common in the US. But, at least in the UK, multi-region DVD players are quite common, and pretty cheap, too!
 
Hi!

Congrads on the move.. LOVE France and the French, you will have a blast. I lived in London, England for 4 years and had quite a collection of DVD's from the US and bought an converter/adapter of some sort from a tech store on-line (sorry cannot remember the site). It is huge and you plug your DVD in to one part and the other part goes in to the wall. The small adapters will fry your DVD player with out the converter. It cost about $200. It is the size of a small toaster.

Good luck.
 
>Hi!
>
>Congrads on the move.. LOVE France and the French, you will
>have a blast. I lived in London, England for 4 years and had
>quite a collection of DVD's from the US and bought an
>converter/adapter of some sort from a tech store on-line
>(sorry cannot remember the site). It is huge and you plug your
>DVD in to one part and the other part goes in to the wall. The
>small adapters will fry your DVD player with out the
>converter. It cost about $200. It is the size of a small
>toaster.
>
>Good luck.
>
>

What you bought was a transformer, and they are expensive! The ones that are large enough to power a fridge or a treadmill are the size of a washing machine, and cost as much as a new fridge!
 
Thanks Stephanie and Winter! I'm assuming that Cathe DVDs work in the universal DVD players yes?

Thanks!
 
>Thanks Stephanie and Winter! I'm assuming that Cathe DVDs
>work in the universal DVD players yes?
>
>Thanks!

Yes, all mine work fine!
 
I lived in Italy for 3 years, where there are a lot of Americans living transformers were readily available.

The 220/110 is not the problem with the motors, it is the frequency. In the US the the frequency of AC current is 60 cycles per second (60 hertz, 60 hz), in Europe it is 50 cycles per second. Bottom line is an AC motor will run slower for example a clock with an AC motor will lose 10 minutes every hour.

If your appliance has a DC motor, it probably won't care about the frequency of the AC current.

A lot of devices have the power requirements printed on them near the power cords entrance into the device. Some will even say 50/60 hz.

When shopping for transformers, you need to calculate the power requirement in Watts (usually printed on the device also). You multiply the Volts to the Current(amps) and come up with that figure. A 1 KW transformer will run a 1000 watt device, but allow yourself a margin say 50%.

Dave
 

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