@elizabth
Changing the waveform’s “speed” is thus changing the frequency of the wave.
Now, even though the US power grid is 60Hz, there is of course some allowed deviation, and there is deviation within our home’s wiring too. Clocks in microwaves, ovens, etc. all use the cycle rate to count time, so if one of your clocks runs faster/slower than the others, it likely means the outlet it’s connected to it constantly putting out less/more cycles (or the clock inside the equipment is just faulty).
But no, changing power cords won’t make a 1kHz note suddenly become a 1200Hz one.
Changing the waveform’s “speed” is thus changing the frequency of the wave.
Now, even though the US power grid is 60Hz, there is of course some allowed deviation, and there is deviation within our home’s wiring too. Clocks in microwaves, ovens, etc. all use the cycle rate to count time, so if one of your clocks runs faster/slower than the others, it likely means the outlet it’s connected to it constantly putting out less/more cycles (or the clock inside the equipment is just faulty).
But no, changing power cords won’t make a 1kHz note suddenly become a 1200Hz one.

