There are several differences between UK and US televisions:
First, UK power supply is 230V and North America is 115V. Although some UK televisions will operate on 90-260V, not all of them do and it may require a transformer or other power adaptor to even power up.
Standard definition video signals use different color encoding. Again, some modern UK televisions will decode NTSC color (the North American color system) but not all of them.
HD signals do not use the same color encoding as as SD but the frame rates are 60Hz in the US, 50Hz in the UK. Some but not all televisions handle both frequencies for SD and HD.
Tuners are not compatible. A set top box will overcome this one and they can be purchased for as little as $30 for SD terrestrial receivers (Similar to the UK Freeview set top boxes). Cable and satellite receivers will also overcome the tuner problem but with the issues mentioned above, you may still not get a working system.
The cost of televisions in the US is considerably lower than the UK. By the time you have invested in Transformers, color transcoders and external tuners, you are very close to buying a new HD television in America. Even better, you don't have the investment in time trying to figure out what you will need to buy and how to hook it up. And rather than paying to ship a British television across the Atlantic, you get to sell it and get more money towards a brand new American model.
It will work if you can get a UK power adaptor for it, and if you have a NTSC compatible TV, but you will only will be able to play games from the US, not ones from the UK.
yes they do ___________________________________________________________ If your trying to say, "Does US Format Wii Games Work On A UK Format Wii" Then no. Reason: UK Wii Have Different Formats than US Games.
Most likely not. European power outlets, video formatting, etc. are different than the North American counter parts.AnswerMy UK Sony Bravia lcd television will work in the US, as it can work at 120 V as well as 230 V, will work on NTSC as well as PAL (I), and has a US tuner.
No US games must be designed for the US System of Televisions and they will not work anywhere else without being offline on US equipment.
Yes, it will as long as your TV is NTSC compatible. If it is not, there is and NTSC-PAL adapter available which will allow this to work on older TV which are not compatible with NTSC
us
NO
No, The two types of consoles have different region encoding. This is called Region Lockout (or Region Lock). They are incompatible. UK games will not work on a US wii. The UK use a PAL (Phase Alternating Line) system whereas the US use NTSC (National Television System Committee). There is a CD called Freeloader which should allow you to play games from different regions on your US wii. i.e JP and UK games will work on the US wii with the CD
It might if you have a plug outlet for the type they have in the uk.
Yes and no.... The console will work, but you'll need a TV capable of displaying NTSC (UK TVs are PAL), you'll also need to either replace the power supply or get a step down transformer. Nintendo has region locked the games for the Wii, you can only play UK games on a UK console. However this is not necessarily a bad thing as by ordering online from US sites you can still get new release games fairly easily, although the exchange rate has eaten into the savings somewhat. One major downside is that you won't be able to access the UK online service with a US console, only the US service.
UK TV - Yes UK Games - No Result - You're gonna have to buy Wii games in Australia.
The short answer is no. The UK uses different AC voltage and plugs from the US, and also a different television system (PAL) from the US (NTSC). These are not compatible. (Television programs traded back and forth have to be converted, to be watched.)