Which power supply for Denmark?
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makeitcount
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- Location: Denmark
Which power supply for Denmark?
Hi I've gotten my hands on a US T60P so what do I need in order to use it with the danish power supplies?
Do I need to order a new one from Lenovo or a supplier if so what's the number I need? (which model)
Do I need to order a new one from Lenovo or a supplier if so what's the number I need? (which model)
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ryengineer
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I've been to europe and used this in Germany:
http://img147.imageshack.us/img147/4050/euadapr1lm7.jpg
and this in UK:
http://img147.imageshack.us/img147/9885/ukadapr0og3.jpg
Just make sure your adapter says 100-240V on it.
http://img147.imageshack.us/img147/4050/euadapr1lm7.jpg
and this in UK:
http://img147.imageshack.us/img147/9885/ukadapr0og3.jpg
Just make sure your adapter says 100-240V on it.
"I've come a long, long way," she said, "and I will go as far,
With the man who takes me from my horse, and leads me to a bar."
The man who took her off her steed, and stood her to a beer,
Were a bleary-eyed Surveyor and a DRUNKEN ENGINEER.
With the man who takes me from my horse, and leads me to a bar."
The man who took her off her steed, and stood her to a beer,
Were a bleary-eyed Surveyor and a DRUNKEN ENGINEER.
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dorin
- Junior Member

- Posts: 363
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- Location: Zürich, Switzerland
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if you have the original adapter, just buy a simple cable which will fit in the adapter,dont know how to explain it but take the adapter to any eletronic/electric suplies shop and they will have the cable.
just to know, US doesnt use 3 prongs cable, so try to use the adapter to very safe power plugs, not "funny" ones. and as long as you wont have the 3rd prong for grounding, whenever is raining plug it out, or you might have the most expensive pan in your house. it is also the chance to buy a safety power plug adapter, which will pervent eventual electric fluctuances, very cheap as well.
just to know, US doesnt use 3 prongs cable, so try to use the adapter to very safe power plugs, not "funny" ones. and as long as you wont have the 3rd prong for grounding, whenever is raining plug it out, or you might have the most expensive pan in your house. it is also the chance to buy a safety power plug adapter, which will pervent eventual electric fluctuances, very cheap as well.
X40 (2386H6G) 1.4Ghz 1.5Gb 40Gb
The 2 conductor cable is a generic 2 conductor cable of the type used for boomboxes, camcorders, electric razors, etc.
This is perfectly safe without a ground because the adapter is double-insulated (the international symbol for that is 2 nested squares) and, at least if you buy the genuine model from Lenovo, is certified to comply with various safety regulations that govern that kind of adapter. If you buy a cheap clone, it might show a certification label but that is almost certainly a forgery.
This is perfectly safe without a ground because the adapter is double-insulated (the international symbol for that is 2 nested squares) and, at least if you buy the genuine model from Lenovo, is certified to comply with various safety regulations that govern that kind of adapter. If you buy a cheap clone, it might show a certification label but that is almost certainly a forgery.
Re: Which power supply for Denmark?
As others have said, if the adapter is marked to accept European current (220/240v) it will work fine. You could either buy a simple plug adapter for the plug to convert it from a US standard to whatever is used in Denmark (same as Germany and France?) or you could replace the cord itself.makeitcount wrote:Hi I've gotten my hands on a US T60P so what do I need in order to use it with the danish power supplies?
Do I need to order a new one from Lenovo or a supplier if so what's the number I need? (which model)
I replace the cords in my Thinkpads routinely because I prefer a longer cord (they ship with 3 foot/1 meter cords and I replace with 6ft/2meter versions). I have generally bought these from Cyberguys.com. They do not sell these with non-USA plugs, but I"m sure they are available from other vendors. If you were going to be using the laptop exclusively in europe, I think it would be worth 5 Euros to get a replacement cord rather than continually bothering with converter plugs.
Ken Fox
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makeitcount
- Freshman Member
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- Joined: Sat Oct 21, 2006 7:13 am
- Location: Denmark
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ryengineer
- Moderator Emeritus

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- Joined: Wed Sep 20, 2006 9:29 pm
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As the range is between 120-240V, all you need is a plug converter and NOT a transformer.makeitcount wrote:This is what I got: what do I need to make it work in Denmark?
Power AC 120/230 V ( 50/60 Hz )
"I've come a long, long way," she said, "and I will go as far,
With the man who takes me from my horse, and leads me to a bar."
The man who took her off her steed, and stood her to a beer,
Were a bleary-eyed Surveyor and a DRUNKEN ENGINEER.
With the man who takes me from my horse, and leads me to a bar."
The man who took her off her steed, and stood her to a beer,
Were a bleary-eyed Surveyor and a DRUNKEN ENGINEER.
-
makeitcount
- Freshman Member
- Posts: 69
- Joined: Sat Oct 21, 2006 7:13 am
- Location: Denmark
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ryengineer
- Moderator Emeritus

- Posts: 4393
- Joined: Wed Sep 20, 2006 9:29 pm
- Location: L.A. (home town) CA, Toronto ON.
Any compatible plug will do it but I suggest you get one of a good quality rather than any cheap asian make.Thanks a ton, that's great news then =) Is any plug good as long as it's grounded, or is there a difference in quality or perhaps some security measures?
"I've come a long, long way," she said, "and I will go as far,
With the man who takes me from my horse, and leads me to a bar."
The man who took her off her steed, and stood her to a beer,
Were a bleary-eyed Surveyor and a DRUNKEN ENGINEER.
With the man who takes me from my horse, and leads me to a bar."
The man who took her off her steed, and stood her to a beer,
Were a bleary-eyed Surveyor and a DRUNKEN ENGINEER.
Well, depending on where you live and the time of the day the voltage may vary in the range from 220V to 250V. This has been accounted for - switch mode power adaptors are always overvoltage protected.makeitcount wrote:I only see 230 V? But since the voltage is 220 V in Denmark, this should be fine right?
If you live in an older building/house (~1970 and earlier), you shouldn't expect to have ground wiring at all. So the third pin in the three pin power supply would just be floating.makeitcount wrote:Is any plug good as long as it's grounded, or is there a difference in quality or perhaps some security measures?
I'm using a US and a Danish/German power supply for my US T42, and both work well... The two-prong plugs for the US power supply is available in Fona, Bilka etc. unless you can find one for free somewhere (scrapyard etc.). Both work fine, and neither have problems with stray voltages.
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