newbie2010
Member
Well after looking at that thumbnail, I think I need you to come on over and help me out in person? Very organized.
yeah my apprentices think they know everything too...Does not work that way, you don't magically switch over to 240v. You have to have 3 conductors for American 240 a typical wire only has two. Also it requires a different breaker that will take up two slots. So really switching over wouldn't have much of a difference then running 14/3 and making 2 15 amp circuits that share the neutral.
A new wire would be required to upgrade the circuits load abilities. 15amps is a 14awg wire, while 20amps is 12awg. So you could replace the current cabling with a 12awg for 20 amps. It's also possible to take a 14/3 or 12/3 (2 hots 1 common) and use each hot for its own circuit while sharing the neutral, which would give you either 30amps or 40amps. Now your fan circuit seems like that best way to go, but I have my doubts its actually on its own circuit. Most likley it is feeding from a general lighting/receptacle circuit. (Not to say thats 100% just what I would guess)
its chaeper to get a timer rated for inductive loadsHi i have a question for you. I have read on the net when using a standared house old timmer with HID lighting i need to have it contected to Contactor? could you please tell me if this is correct. I have a HPS 70w lamp that i need to put on a standard mains timmer would this be safe?
Missing a piece. That 1000W is for the *bulb's* draw. It doesn't factor in the extra ~10% more for the ballast operation.Just divide wattage by voltage. (So for a 1k light running 120v it'd be 1000/120=8.3amps
12g does 30amps for taps, or circuits at a different temperature rating but the circuit protection required for a 12awg is 20amps, see 240.4. Or we looking at 310-315?yeah my apprentices think they know everything too...
your ampacity figures arent even right... #12 Cu has been rated for 30 amps for 2 codebooks now...
and here in the U.S. a common is the grounded conductor on a low voltage (60v or less) circuit.
for starters... you cant pull 15 amps on a #14. the breaker will trip. you can pull 1440 watts, @ 120v, ands thats about it.
and i dont know where you think you HAVE to have a 3 wire circuit to get 240v... maybe in a residential kitchen or laundry room (as required by NEC) the reason for that is modern appliances tap off of one leg of the 240v circuit to run the controls, as opposed to having a 240/120 powersupply that is a potential point of failure....
this is not my first ball game son. ive been doing this for a long time. so if you want to critique, do your homework first...
ps/ edit-
and as far as homework, telling that guy that a resisitive timer will work with an inductive load shows your lack of competence. quit while your ahead.
the amperage/wattage/demand factor doesnt have a thing to do with it...Can't argue much with this as I only know what I've learned verbally which obviously would mean nothing to you. But the reason people say not to use resistive on inductive loads is primarily for the start-up power required to charge the magnets, but at the .8power factor or even far less then that a resistive timer of 10amps could easily handle 70watts.
lol no shit.......Hply crap guys, I am an electrical inspector and you guys make my head hurt. lmao
Hply crap guys, I am an electrical inspector and you guys make my head hurt. lmao
ya i know. i help the ones out that seem to have sense... and talk the ones that have no clue through the proper steps to determine if they need a pro or not. i run another electrical thread as well, and i periodically check on this one since the OP abandoned it.This is nothing... there are posts recommending to stoners who haven't the least lick of sense, busting open breaker boxes and/or tapping into one side of 220 lines. It's getting as dangerous as meth labs.... for fucks sake.