The biggest advantage for 220V is on motors for which 110V provides a marginally sized circuit. Someone mentioned earlier table saws, most belt drive "contractor" sized saws have a 1 1/2 hp motor, which at 110V draws around 13 FLA (full load amps), meaning that a standard 15 amp 110V circuit is marginal, especially if the wire covers any distance at all, the motor is going to see a large voltage drop and will run hotter than it should. Given that a vast majority of 220V circuits are sized in the 20 amp range and larger, there will be no problem operating a 1 1/2 hp or smaller motor.
Just to clear up any myths of 220V versus 110V, it will not:
- Double the motors output
- Halve the electricity consumption
- And all others factors being correctly accounted for, it will not allow the motor to last longer, run cooler, or provide more output. If it does then you were operating the motor on a marginal circuit to start with.
Jake