NO.....
theres no such thing as wire that is too big when dealing with electricity.
however the downside is it is difficult to terminate #6 on a device.
what i would reccomend is getting a cheap MAIN LUG type 60amp loadcenter to put on the other end of your 6/3
then you can slap a few breakers in there to run your equipment properly
40 amps = 3840 watts @ 120v OR 7680 watts @ 240v
hope that answered your question
PS-
and DO NOT try 'snipping' or 'trimming' a few strands of copper off of the #6 to 'make it fit' on a device... that can and WILL cause a fire... do it right man, and you will be much happier.
hit me up if you need help.......
Great thanks for the quick replay its good to know that the wire will work ... I am not familair with electricianical vocab so i dont know what you mean byNO.....
theres no such thing as wire that is too big when dealing with electricity.
however the downside is it is difficult to terminate #6 on a device.
what i would reccomend is getting a cheap MAIN LUG type 60amp loadcenter to put on the other end of your 6/3
then you can slap a few breakers in there to run your equipment properly
40 amps = 3840 watts @ 120v OR 7680 watts @ 240v
hope that answered your question
PS-
and DO NOT try 'snipping' or 'trimming' a few strands of copper off of the #6 to 'make it fit' on a device... that can and WILL cause a fire... do it right man, and you will be much happier.
hit me up if you need help.......
K i wont down size il use this wire but when i look at my control panel i see other 40 amp breakers connectedblack on top, red on bottom.
id stick with the bigger wire.. dont downsize, trust me man.
dont ever look at another wire to guess to see what size you need.
ask a pro
Ok, I may get some thinner wire maybe i kinda would like to get this done today but i just need to get everything down pat before i go at it.You can use # 10 wire which is easier to work with.Depending on load you might even get away with using #12 wire.Hookin up a 220 breaker,The black and red placement make no differernce,but the white and green wires HAVE TO GO GROUND.Sorry about da caps but this is important!!!!
No just be sure that there are more of the same color goin to it.I`ve added a second ground bar to accomadate extra wires.If you get new wire make sure it`s 10/3that means you`ve got a nutral and a ground..Good Luck.Hollar if I can help.........Ok, I may get some thinner wire maybe i kinda would like to get this done today but i just need to get everything down pat before i go at it.
YEa i see where the green and white ones go, however i see the white ones all over the bottom of the panel does it matter where i connect the white at the bottom of the panel??
it is a possibility but not very likely in this case. it really depends on just how many things your using all at once.. the stove and appliances dont bother me, but those 15amp breakers are what usually overloads a main... people just buy extension cords and power strips and go nuts plugging things in, not realizing they are running unbalanced loads that make main breakers trip...Another question came to mind is that there is that this is a 100 amp panel... there is a stove attached to this panel running 40 amp, a dryer running 30 amp and then i will be adding this load of another 40 amps.... not to mention all the 15 amp breakers running various things in the house....
Could me adding this 40 amp service overload the 100 amp panel? like should my freind ever be running his stove dryer and grow at the saemtime?? or would this cause the 100 amp breaker to go?