May 10th, 2009 in Sony Tv | leave a response
rodin jayron c asked: i bought a sony bravia lcd tv here in australia, i wonder if i can use it in the Philippines. i know there is a difference in voltage and power supply. is there a way i can use the said sony LCD TV in the Philippines? thanks.
Tags: Bravia Lcd Tv, Philippines, Power Supply, Sony, Sony Australia, Sony Bravia Lcd, Sony Bravia Lcd Tv, Sony Lcd Tv, Sony Tv, Tv Australia
May 13th, 2009 at 2:03 am
no aus uses PAL wich means u cant but if u go to North America u can because they use NTSC, which is what you hav
The digital tuner is DVB-T, but the Philippines hasn’t settled on a standard, which means no one is broadcasting digitally.
So you’re probably in decent shape if you’re using the TV as a monitor for your VCR or DVD player or MagicSing karaoke system or cable/satellite box. Over the air TV is another issue.
May 15th, 2009 at 3:26 pm
you have to by a special plug that will allow you to plug it in over there its not that expencive.
May 18th, 2009 at 7:27 pm
You will need a voltage converter…. I don’t know what their power supply is like in the phillipines, but I live in japan and my stuff is all plugged into japanese power supplies and they work and don’t blow or anything. It’s all american stuff.
but i wouldn’t take the chance with the tv and definitely get a voltage converter when you get back to the phillipines
May 20th, 2009 at 10:31 pm
i think you will be able to as long as phillpenes has the same network as Australia does
by the way please put me as best answer
May 22nd, 2009 at 2:04 pm
I dont think it will work…Here is the site that told me why…the voltage, frequency, and socket type are all different…but they do have things you can by to plug in to the end of the plug of the tv that will work in the socket in the Philippines…scroll down to the first table and look at both countries voltage, frequency, and socket types.
May 23rd, 2009 at 8:13 am
It’s not just a power issue, it’s a broadcast standards issue.
The analog tuner is PAL, but the Philippines uses NTSC, just like in North America. So right there you’ve got an analog tuner problem.
The digital tuner is DVB-T, but the Philippines hasn’t settled on a standard, which means no one is broadcasting digitally.
So you’re probably in decent shape if you’re using the TV as a monitor for your VCR or DVD player or MagicSing karaoke system or cable/satellite box. Over the air TV is another issue.