I am making a micro grow 21"w x 10"d x 55"h its going to be a dual chamber grow. I want to get it to where only one wire comes out, at least I think so. There is a good size surge protector at walmart I cant find it on their site it has a 15amp fuse in it. So my question is how much stuff can you put on a surge protector? Will I be fine if I buy one and put say 6 cfls, 2-3 120mm pc fans?
There would be 4 26wat cfls on the bottom chamber with a fan. The cfls would each have there own socket and wire that would then be spliced or plugged together and then into the surge protector. The top chamber would have 2 26 watt cfls, havent decided about location of them yet, and 2 fans.
What would the difference be if there was some 42 watt cfls mixed in? Also if one surge protector with all of that on it is going to burn my place down, would it be safe on two surge protectors? And what if I took two surge protectors and spliced their wires together?
that single 15amp surge protector will be fine for your CFL's
1 - Never touch the surge protector wires mainly because your making the fire % higher. If you cut the plug in part off and use that as your wiring from the plug to your light socket that could work but that can be kinda expensive.
2 - I have 1 PS3 (around 300 to 400 watts), Lizard tank (150 watts), TV, VCR, 2 Laptops and 2 external hard drives plugged into a single 16 gauge power bar with no problems but I wouldn't do more then that for safty reasons.
3 -I would never have more then 1 41+ watt CFL on a single wire because the more wattage you have on a single plug the more risk of a fire you have. Also I wouldn't bother splicing more then 1 CFL onto a single power cord. Now if it was LED lights that use 3.5 watts then you might be able to get away with having 4 of them on a single wire because they would only draw 14 watts in all and they don't give off any heat. I have a few in my room instead of using a few 13w CFLs because do the math and having a single 13w CFL running 24/7 for 30 days would cost around $0.60 compared to around $0.15 of running a 3.5w LED light for the same amount of time.
They are the same as the CFLs where you can't use them on a dimmer but its 1 of the best ways to cut down on your power bill cost thus lowering your chances of a person noticing your bill because face it would you rather have a 600w HPS with 13w to 60w lights that most people use or would you rather use the 3.5w LED lights to cut the cost so that its harder to notice the difference in the power bill.
on what basis do you make your assumptions?
you shouldnt be giving people electrical advice if you dont have the credentials to back it up.
you can splice together the power cord of power strips all say long with no issues whatsoever... its called a
parallel tap amnd its how
all the outlets in your house are wired anyways, so whats the difference between splicing together two powerstrips to one cord, or plugging in to power strips in different outlets on the same circuit? there is no difference.
an average 25' 16awg extension cord or fixture wire is rated for 2 amps @ 120vac. thats 240w. by my math, that means you could easily have any combination of lamps up to 192w of CFL's on a single 16awg cord with no issues whatsoever. the shorter the length of the cord, the higher the ampacity. if its less than 10' of 18awg cord, then you can run up to 288w, if its less than 6' you can have 432w.....
and as far as math goes, you should check yours because an 3.5w LED has nowhere near the PAR of a 13w CFL
runing the led's would be useless over an almost negligible cost difference. 4 43w cfl's (172w actual)will put to shame 172w of led's.
why is that? APAR and IPAR......