Running An Oven In 2.5mm Flex?
I have a fan assisted oven which draws about 12A maximum but the nearest socket outlet is already part of a ring main which is pretty fully loaded so I decided that it'd be best to plug it into the other ring main in my house and the nearest socket is about 15metres away, would a 2.5mm flex be ok for this or should I opt for a 4mm? Or would a 4mm have a knock on effect on something else
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I recently bought an appliance which came with a 2.5mm flex and as most flexes I've seen the ends of each conductor had a sort of gold crimp like thing round it to make it a solid and I suppose to make a better connection? The flex wasn't long enough so I had to go out and buy a 10M flex but this doesnt have the gold crimps at the end! Are these something you can buy? And if so whats the correct name for them
I have a 30amp wall socket in my garage, connected to two 20amp fuses in my garage sub box. I bought a 60 gallon air compressor rated 230v 15amp (non-reversible???). I am under the impression that I can use this compressor with the socket I have. The compressor did not come with a plug but did have the wires. One red, one green, one white. The plug I bought to the match the socket has instructions for one black wire (hot) one green (ground) and one white (neutral) I guess my question is, would the red wire be my hot wire? Does everything else sound ok?
I bought a LED fixture that fits in a 4inch can
http://indoors.pricegrabber.com/show...s/m/928501559/ The thing iswhen I pushed the fixture in I niked the black wire from the can's socket. What should I do replace the socket or should I just take the can's socket out and also the LED socket out and use marettes? The thing is I don't have much cable from the box the romex is about 6 inches long and was cut to lenght!!!
Greetings,
I am looking to wire a sub-panel in my barn to support a general workshop. Loads would include standard woodworking tools (including 220V table saw), welding, air compressor, etc. The house has 200AMP main breaker and minimal in-house loads. Dryer is gas, Oven and cooktop are gas. Water heater is off the oil furnace. I think the biggest single load is the well-pump and/or fridge compressor. We do have sporadic toaster oven, hairdryers etc. Otherwise its just lights, ceiling fans, flat-panel tv, stereo... We had 4" conduit installed to the barn, so there is plenty of room to pull a big cable. The entire run from the house panel to the barn totals around 155' (probably less, but rounding up) My questions a Can I pull a 100AMP sub-panel from my main house panel as described? Would 4/0,4/0,4/0,2/0 aluminum service entrance cable be a good choice for this run? Could I do it with something lighter? Could I put an additional sub-panel in the garage (about halfway to the barn) by interrupting the run? The garage subpanel would have a 220V plug for possible welding and/or electric car charging. Would this require a separate run? Are there any other considerations I should be thinking about in planning this? Thanks for any thoughts you can share on this! Cheers, pete
I've been the owner of a 1930s era Colonial Revival that our first major project is to rewire the house. We have a 100A main box that is maxed out, a combination of cloth 2-wire, flex, and some cracking Romex along with some downright dangerous open wiring in the basement, tapped wiring in the kitchen and study, some gangboxes that were wallpapered over in the bedrooms that we assume were wall lights (we have similar wall lights in the bathrooms), inadequate outlets in most rooms, no GFI. Etc. Etc. In addition the bathrooms are small and lack wall switches or outlets (they have two pull-cord wall lamps, with one lamp with a outlet.
Here is a floor plan with electrical represented on the ground and second floor. Still working on mapping the basement and the attic (which has a 3/4 converted finished "bonus" room. My Father-In-Law who is a licensed electrician has promised to gracefully donate a couple months of his time to rewire everything. Also a bonus in this is the majority of outlets are mounted on the baseboard trim and not in the plaster. My plans are to go with a single 200A main, likely double the amount of outlets in each room, GFI where needed. While I know some basics, I want to familiarize myself a bit more on what is the best approach to rewire. For instance should I look at running conduit in just one spot of the house, or should I run two on each end of the house? I plan to do some major remodeling of some rooms in the future, especially the kitchen and bath so what are the best ways to ensure I have an easier time with these remodels?
Is there anything that actually stops me from wiring a 2.8kW oven in 2.5mm twin and earth? Done the cable sizing calculation and voltage drop and it's all legit, am I missing something though? I know a few people have said it better to wire it in 4mm/6mm incase a differemt cooker etc is ever put in, but is it dangerous for it to be wired in 2.5 for example could the cable overheat?
Do I need to install the lugs in 320a meter socket
I'm installing a 2.8kW fan assisted oven (no hob) I done some cable sizing calculations and voltage drop calculations and added 50% overload in aswell and I found I could use a 2.5mm cable to supply it. I also found I could use a 20A MCB, a friend said that he would use a 32A to be safe but didnt give me any other reasons why? Is this better or would it stop it from tripping under fault conditions? Is it also acceptable to use a 20A double pole switch to isolate it?
Thanks for any feed back
Just want to confirm that I'm doing this right. I've already done this to all the outlets in the original part of the house several years ago....but just want to make sure I'm not making some mistake....
This is a typical outlet...one of many on the same branch ckt....I find this a whole lot easier to work with....I shove the main bundle to the back of the box....so if I ever have to pull the outlet out...it's easy....just the 3 wires...instead of 6.
QUESTION: can I run (2) 14-2 romex wires in (1) 3/4 BX Armored cable?
SETUP: I am finishing my basement and a few main floor circuits are intermingled with the basement lights and outlets. In finishing the basement, all basement electrical will be on its own circuit. Therefore, I need to rewire some main floor items. For instance, the main floor living room outlets go through the den area below in the basement. The 3/4 BX cable goes through the ceiling to the outlets. PLAN: I plan to cut the armored cable shortly after it comes out of the ceiling (main floor floor) and just connect the first floor outlets in a series using the proper bushing and BX cable ends. I will strap the BX cable ends down and the romex as soon as it comes out. The electrical inspector already gave me thumbs up on doing this for the electric oven and cooktop (bigger wires of course). I searched and couldn't find anything to this specific question. Any input? B |