J232
Well-Known Member
A nice fat 1 gauge extension cord is never a bad investment in our game.Will do and thanks for the advice , much appreciated
A nice fat 1 gauge extension cord is never a bad investment in our game.Will do and thanks for the advice , much appreciated
Iv been looking , this one looks legitA nice fat 1 gauge extension cord is never a bad investment in our game.
At 25 feet, it should be good to handle any 15 amp loads you put on it. That’s 12/3 so it is well rated for a 15 amp breaker seeing the wire in the wall is 14/3.Iv been looking , this one looks legit
Haha I think I read this somewhere else hope you’re house is okayMy dad was visiting once, and replaced a breaker with a 30 Amp since it kept tripping cause I had 2 AC's going. Well it was all good, until the house was on fire.
Ya you did. I'm still waiting to hear if Moab's figured it out yet.Haha I think I read this somewhere else hope you’re house is okay
On the right track, but see where that says lighted. I've had one of those they will work but it's a pain because the plug is lighted and will glow orange while your light is off. I used foil tape to cover mine when I used it but I'd rather have realized before I bought it.Iv been looking , this one looks legit
thanks but it’s going outside the tentOn the right track, but see where that says lighted. I've had one of those they will work but it's a pain because the plug is lighted and will glow orange while your light is off. I used foil tape to cover mine when I used it but I'd rather have realized before I bought it.
Appreciate your words of wisdom mate, Iv decided to not touch anything at all and first see the two separate outlets can take all the appliances I’m planning to run. If anything the surge protector or circuit breakers will trip to turn off on its own. I’m only running 660 watt led, dehumi, fans , led controller and maybe a portable ac... nothing big , but I’m planning to call a certified electrician if I need anything worked on... thanks again !Mate im an electrician in Australia, so im pretty confident my input will be valid.
First point,
Are you an electrician? If not don't be an idiot and play with shit that can kill you. No matter how easy it might sound, no matter how easy it may in fact be it is just too easy to make a mistake and not only hurt your self but your loved ones who you will leave behind when you either A. Die or .B turn into a crippple. I seriously can't stress enough how stupid it is to play with the invisible dangers of electricity.
Second point,
Assuming you take on this advise you won't be able to do anything anyhow. So to understand why you shouldn't just bump up the breaker size let's look at some theory first.
Current Carrying Capacity (C.C.C), The idea is that a cable size/guage has a maximum C.C.C (there are other derating factors but for this ill keep it simple.
Im my world when I wire a house i need to do the below formula (plus others) to figure out the most cost effective and safe cable sizes.
IB < IN < IZ
Where
IB = maximum load
IN = Circuit breaker size (CB)
IZ = C.C.C of cable
So the load must be less than the CB size, and the CB size must be less than the C.C.C of the cable. We do this to protect the integrity of the cable. Its all about protection.
In australia we use (usually but not always), 2.5mm2 as the standard power point cables which is pretty close to your 14awg cable (2.59mm2 conversion) so if your cable is currently 14awg it could potentially be upgraded 20A CB but don't quote me on that,
BUT
You mentioned its only a 15a CB currently, I would be concerned because it could potentially be 16awg which would be equivalent to my 1.5mm2 and it only has a C.C.C of 18a. If this is the case and you do upgrade the cable, mate your not maybe going to cause a fire you will at some point. Insurance won't cover it.
I hope ive given you somthing to think about though, feel free to ask further questions. I would rather give information than have people misguided by un-informed or un educated people. Fyi in australia it is illigal for people to conduct electrical work without an electrical licence (4 year apprentiship). (Its also illigal to grow green in most states aswell haha)
Good luck happy growing
The surge protector protects the equipment plugged into it from power surges. It doesn't protect the household wiring. That's what they breakers are for.Appreciate your words of wisdom mate, Iv decided to not touch anything at all and first see the two separate outlets can take all the appliances I’m planning to run. If anything the surge protector or circuit breakers will trip to turn off on its own. I’m only running 660 watt led, dehumi, fans , led controller and maybe a portable ac... nothing big , but I’m planning to call a certified electrician if I need anything worked on... thanks again !
Appreciate your words of wisdom mate, Iv decided to not touch anything at all and first see the two separate outlets can take all the appliances I’m planning to run. If anything the surge protector or circuit breakers will trip to turn off on its own. I’m only running 660 watt led, dehumi, fans , led controller and maybe a portable ac... nothing big , but I’m planning to call a certified electrician if I need anything worked on... thanks again !
Most surge protectors are junk. You have to spend good money on ones that actually protect your devices. That being said , i dont use the expensive ones. im an electrician so i just keep um cool but i would never expect it to trip and save anything. If your goal is an actual surge protector then use google and find a working one. You will be just fine with the power you have. The washing machine is probably on a circuit by itself so you KNOW that circuit is cool to plug into unless you have problems with flickering. (very likely with lights plugged into washing machine)The surge protector protects the equipment plugged into it from power surges. It doesn't protect the household wiring. That's what they breakers are for.
Yup , planning to use the washer outlet for the led or portable ac. I should have the light going very soon to test temps at night. I feel weird growing again, it’s been 6 yearsMost surge protectors are junk. You have to spend good money on ones that actually protect your devices. That being said , i dont use the expensive ones. im an electrician so i just keep um cool but i would never expect it to trip and save anything. If your goal is an actual surge protector then use google and find a working one. You will be just fine with the power you have. The washing machine is probably on a circuit by itself so you KNOW that circuit is cool to plug into unless you have problems with flickering. (very likely with lights plugged into washing machine)
I use this product, never had anything fry from a surge.Most surge protectors are junk. You have to spend good money on ones that actually protect your devices.
Gives advice then tells O.P not to take advice from people on this forum lolI setup my own sub panel and there is more too it than just picking a size of wire and a size of breaker.
Even 12 gauge is too small for a 20 amp breaker if your running for example 18 amps+ through the circuit all day and night long.
So answer me this
How much electricity will you be running through this circuit?
And for how long will this load be on?
Remember even if you have 12 gauge wire you cannot upgrade to a 20 amp breaker if you will be using 18+amps 24 hours a day the wire is not big enough for this type of a load.
20 amp breaker using 12 gauge is only good for partial loads at Around 17amps + not full loads!!!!!
And its scary that no one on here that gave you advice talked about full loads vs partial loads on a circuit.
In my opinion
Don't listen too people on here about electrical advice because you will get bad advice.
Don't start a fire contact a cheap certified electrician in your area, you can get this issue resolved with like 100 bucks.
Someone has read As 3000 .Mate im an electrician in Australia, so im pretty confident my input will be valid.
First point,
Are you an electrician? If not don't be an idiot and play with shit that can kill you. No matter how easy it might sound, no matter how easy it may in fact be it is just too easy to make a mistake and not only hurt your self but your loved ones who you will leave behind when you either A. Die or .B turn into a crippple. I seriously can't stress enough how stupid it is to play with the invisible dangers of electricity.
Second point,
Assuming you take on this advise you won't be able to do anything anyhow. So to understand why you shouldn't just bump up the breaker size let's look at some theory first.
Current Carrying Capacity (C.C.C), The idea is that a cable size/guage has a maximum C.C.C (there are other derating factors but for this ill keep it simple.
Im my world when I wire a house i need to do the below formula (plus others) to figure out the most cost effective and safe cable sizes.
IB < IN < IZ
Where
IB = maximum load
IN = Circuit breaker size (CB)
IZ = C.C.C of cable
So the load must be less than the CB size, and the CB size must be less than the C.C.C of the cable. We do this to protect the integrity of the cable. Its all about protection.
In australia we use (usually but not always), 2.5mm2 as the standard power point cables which is pretty close to your 14awg cable (2.59mm2 conversion) so if your cable is currently 14awg it could potentially be upgraded 20A CB but don't quote me on that,
BUT
You mentioned its only a 15a CB currently, I would be concerned because it could potentially be 16awg which would be equivalent to my 1.5mm2 and it only has a C.C.C of 18a. If this is the case and you do upgrade the cable, mate your not maybe going to cause a fire you will at some point. Insurance won't cover it.
I hope ive given you somthing to think about though, feel free to ask further questions. I would rather give information than have people misguided by un-informed or un educated people. Fyi in australia it is illigal for people to conduct electrical work without an electrical licence (4 year apprentiship). (Its also illigal to grow green in most states aswell haha)
Good luck happy growing
im professional electrician, i sign all he said... you dont mess with electricity, and you dont ask on forums for help, its cheaper to get a proper electrician than to buy new house...I setup my own sub panel and there is more too it than just picking a size of wire and a size of breaker.
Even 12 gauge is too small for a 20 amp breaker if your running for example 18 amps+ through the circuit all day and night long.
So answer me this
How much electricity will you be running through this circuit?
And for how long will this load be on?
Remember even if you have 12 gauge wire you cannot upgrade to a 20 amp breaker if you will be using 18+amps 24 hours a day the wire is not big enough for this type of a load.
20 amp breaker using 12 gauge is only good for partial loads at Around 17amps + not full loads!!!!!
And its scary that no one on here that gave you advice talked about full loads vs partial loads on a circuit.
In my opinion
Don't listen too people on here about electrical advice because you will get bad advice.
Don't start a fire contact a cheap certified electrician in your area, you can get this issue resolved with like 100 bucks.
yep, but please, dont give advices here, people who arent proffesionals tend to think its nothing if you use wire you have, 12 gauge, 14 gauge, its similar right? nope... just hire an electrician...Someone has read As 3000 .
Seriously good advice, O.P should be listening to this dude
He asked legit questions and got legit answers. no big deal. no harm done.yep, but please, dont give advices here, people who arent proffesionals tend to think its nothing if you use wire you have, 12 gauge, 14 gauge, its similar right? nope... just hire an electrician...