Hi I tried running a 10volt charger connected to a 12 volt incandescent car headlight bulb as its 12 volts I thought the charger would power it 90 per cent creating light (well heat is what I want) now every think went fine for 2 hours then the charger stopped working so I found another 10volt charger and rewired it fantastic 3 hours charger burnt out can you explain what I am doing wrong pleaseHi there fellow RIU'ers... Over and over again I continualy see new threads and posts about electrical work question and thought I would post a couple threads to help you guys the same way all of you who have done such a great job having helped me... So, Do you have a grow room question about how to wire something up, or what are the safest ways of doing things? The most important one I see alot is people running lights and fans off power chords... I have wired my own grow room and will post an example of my work.
Please, if you have any questions and are unsure of what to do or if what you are doing is safe, PLEASE! ask me first if you are even a tad bit unsure. I would hate to hear anyone have an electrical fire because they didn't quite know what they were doing when all they needed to do was to ask a couple of questions... I will do my best to point you in the right direction.
If you want to do some wiring your self, I will either let you know if your project is too complicated if your not handy with electrical, or, IF YOU ASK, I will walk you thru your project step by step.
So please, ASK AWAY!!!
You can post questions here but you may not get your question answerd on the thread, best way to go about it is PM me. You will forsure get a response back.
PS Even if you have basic around the home electrical questions, shoot em my way.
you just showed your ignorance.Nicet not building code. Just state your response as your opion not a fact or code.
charger 1 stopped working input:239v 50hz 140ma output 10v 1.2aWhat is the rating of the charger you used?
Headlights should run around 60watts.
Thanks for your quick reply IAm5toned. You have saved me some work and made it safer. Y'all are doing a great job!the only thing wrong with it is you should be using #12 where i highlighted in red.
#14 would work in a pinch, but if you ever decide to expand the op it will give you lots of problems, especially if you u/g yourlight to a 1000w down the road. using #12 now will save you aggravation later.
and its against code to run #14 on a 20 amp breaker too
Hi people me again well its winter here and I have 4 metal cans with screw lids I am able to tin weld the lights under the cap feed the wires through the hole I ran this in my non heated propagator for 3 hours with a steady temp of 78f now in my roof space(winter) unless directly under lights it falls to 10c which isnt much good for propagation as you know now my flower room is 10c and worked out roughly it bring my temps back into the 70s at night with no light naked flame or cost so a work round on the power would be great I have a large selection of power sources can some one point me in the right direction I know I am nearly their what valuable bit of the puzzle am I missing as if resistance before the light a coil say would lower amps/watts/heat/light and would solve the problem?? HelpWhat is the rating of the charger you used?
Headlights should run around 60watts.
makes a ton of sense. Thanksit has to do with the way a/c works. even after the electricity has passed through your device and done its 'job' additional volt-amps are used up by the current running down the neutral and dissapating into earth.
when you have a balanced load, the volt/amps travel across phases and help power other devices on the opposite phase.
ill give a simple but somewhat complicated explanation...
at peak voltage on a 120/240 service, you have 177 volts positive on phase one, and 177 volts negative polarity on phase 2...
now lets pretend there are to devices on that service, one on phase 1, one on phase 2. both devices pull 10 amps, balanced load... when the device one phase 1 uses 10 amps of positive current, the device on phase 2 uses 10 amps of negative current. ( b4 i go further, think of a train, constantly going one distance in one direction, then reversing and traveling the same distance backwards, repeating the cycle endlessly, that is alternating current... the cars of the train would be individual electrons) now because you have 2 phases at opposite polarity, the energy that would normally be used to carry the load down the neutral, to the panel, outside your house to the power companies pole, will instead do something rather remarkable, at the panel, where the load would normally go outside, instead travels back up the neutral and is used tpo power devices on the opposite phase.... if you had one device on phase 1 that pulled 12 amps, and a device on phase 2 that pulled 10 amps, then you would have 2 amps of unbalanced current running down the neutral.... make sense?
It is very possible but your gonna want to know what else might be on that circuit, and also how many watts/amps you will be using (lights, fans, ect...) and you need to know what size wire it is?Ok, quick question. I am wanting to change the light in my attic into a socket that i could plug my hps and a couple fans into. Would this be possible, if so what would I need to do this?
Here are some pix of what I have to work with.
Well the attic is right above my laundry room and bathroom, so i would assume it is on the same circuit as one of those, probably the laundry. As far as the light goes, I am wanting to completely remove the light and change that into the socket I would use for the HPS/fans.It is very possible but your gonna want to know what else might be on that circuit, and also how many watts/amps you will be using (lights, fans, ect...) and you need to know what size wire it is?
other then that you will need a outlet to put in place of that light, you can use an adapter but i dont like um.....
sorry not very detailed answer
wb
Well the attic is right above my laundry room and bathroom, so i would assume it is on the same circuit as one of those, probably the laundry. As far as the light goes, I am wanting to completely remove the light and change that into the socket I would use for the HPS/fans.
As far as the size of the wire I would have to go back up, but before I do.. What should I be looking for?
Check to make sure the circuit is not a 20amp. Putting a 15 amp outlet on a 20 amp circuit is a no no.
Your going to the hardware store to buy , mudplates, and 15 or 20 amp outlets. 20 amp outlets are preferred, and obviously are no problem on a 15 amp circuit. And possibly a little bit of 14 gauge wire to daisy chain to one other outlet.
Look at the side of the wire, it says the guage all the way down it. if its 14 wire then its good for upto 15 amps. you dont wanna use anymore then 75% of the total ......so you would not want to run no more then 11 or 12 amps/ or 1500 watts, topps.Well the attic is right above my laundry room and bathroom, so i would assume it is on the same circuit as one of those, probably the laundry. As far as the light goes, I am wanting to completely remove the light and change that into the socket I would use for the HPS/fans.
As far as the size of the wire I would have to go back up, but before I do.. What should I be looking for?
This is wrong.
You CAN have a 15a duplex receptacle on a 20a circuit(as long as it is not the only receptacle on the circuit). Alternatively, you CAN NOT have a 20a outlet on a 15a circuit. Also, for a 20a circuit you should use 12 gauge wire.
That is all.
Just common knowledge bro... don't know who you're doing electric for.. but I'm feel for themNo offense, but if you're so damn knowledgeable, explain to me why you can't put a 20 amp outlet on a 15amp circuit. I'm an electrician apprentice for 4 years now, and pretty damn sure i got that right.
If you put a 20amp outlet on a 15 amp circuit the breaker trips before you hit the outlets limit. Aka, no problem.