Double Pole Vs Single Pole Question
I have a small 19 gallon water heater in a small garage space, that was installed by some questionable handymen a few months back. I just had the plumbing and septic finished so tested the hot water, only to find the element was already burned out.
I noticed however, that this 120v unit is wired via 10 gauge wire to a 30 amp double breaker. This is questionable because I thought a 120v appliance would be wired to a single pole on the hot wire and run neutral to the neural panel area. My question is, can I run the hot wire out of one side of the double breaker without safety issues, or should I definitely replace it with a single pole breaker? I would normally not question the work, but everything these guys did already had to be adjusted, so I'm only naturally assuming this may need to be also. If its safe, I would like to simply things and just connect the one hot and leave an open space in the other half of the double pole... Is this possible? Thanks for your advice- Similar Tutorials
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Hello again Gurus,
Will a double pole 15A 277v light switch work as a shut off for my air handler? I had to run all the electrical prior to them installing the central air and I wired a double pole switch from my 15A double pole breaker. I ran to the line/load ie black/white to the bottom posts on the switch. Thinking they can just run black/white from the air handler to the top. When the switch is UP> Live power to air handler. If it it's down (OFF), it means they can service the unit. Is my thinking correct on this? I couldn't find any other switches. Thank You ~S
Am doing a bathroom reno and installed a new fan. Original switch was a simple on off single pole. I want to install a DewPoint condensation fan switch that will turn on automatically at a certain moisture level.
The new switch as 4 wires. green ground, red fan, black power, and white neutral. I know the ground, but how do I hook up the neutral and fan to the existing fan set up? There is a double pole light switch in the same box that has a couple wires to it, and there is a mass of whites that I am not sure where they go Can I hook up the neutral somewhere else, or put it with the fan like a single pole? What do I do with this? In the attached picture the switch on the right is the 2 pole light switch and on the left is the fan switch that I hope to replace. Your Advice is appreciated
Can anyone please tell me what type of wire i need for my hot water heater? Also is it going to be a double pole 30A breaker or is it just 120V #10/2?
Can i run 20amp double pole breaker for 120v outlets
I was cleaning my garage and think I got some water into an outlet. This caused 2 gfi outlets to trip, a regular outlet to stop working, and one side of a double pole circuit breaker to trip. Now the gfi's can't be reset by pressing the button, and the breaker can't be turned back on either. Does the breaker need to be shut off in order to reset the outlets? It's been like this for 3 months now. Please help!
hello
I am dealing with what seems like a strange issue with a single pole switch, and I am royally baffled even after reaching out to someone a little more knowledgeable than me. Yesterday: Replaced with a single pole switch with an identical one that I painted (for decor reasons). Two wires were going into the old, and the same 2 wires are attached to the new one. However, the light it controls fails to come on despite light bulb being good, and outlet located 4 feet below the switch fails to operate. With voltmeter in hand I tested voltages. At the switch: 3 wires feed into it, all whites capped together, and 2 of the 3 blacks (A,B,C) are hot with 110. A is hot and was/is connected to one of the terminals of the single pole switch. B and C (hot) are capped together with a jumper that goes to the other terminal of the single pole switch. So I am royally baffled as to why a switch would be wired with 2 hot wires going into it. I swear it has been like that since we bought the house a year ago, and the light worked fine. I simply replaced the switch with the same wiring, and now it doesnt work. I even touched both hots (A and C) independently to wire B which (using common sense) should be the load wire to the lamp, but the lamp did not come one. Other outlets in that circuit do not work either. They get 110 to line and ground, but not across the outlet. I hope I was clear in explaining, and I hope someone can possibly shed some light so I can resolve this. Thank you
I am only using a simple "non-contact" voltage detector. I am getting a reading from the switch, along part of the line and then at the lights themselves, but the lights are not coming on. I have not gotten into the attic yet to check the line and junction box. What could cause this? An open connection or loose connection? Any help with troubleshooting would be great.
This is a new install of lights, they were not existing. Power is at the switch. Had single pole now I have a double switch. (the existing light that was on the single pole is still working fine). At one point I connected just the new lights to the existing power, single pole switch, and still did not have lights.
I was given a table saw from about 1960 - actually a very good machine - it would cost a fortune nowadays, but a friend who felt he owed me one gave it to me before he moved to Florida. It has a 1 HP motor that has always worked fine and has worked fine for me in tests, but the cord is an old 2-wire version, and I want to replace it with a new cord.
The manual says to use a 10 gauge wire (the cord is about 6' long). I want to replace it with a 3-wire, grounded cord. Do I simply run the neutral wire on the new cord where the old white wire was, the black wire to where the old black wire was, and connect the ground to the chassis? The switch is a single throw, double pole switch, by the way. Here's a link to the manual, if that helps anyone: http://vintagemachinery.org/pubs/detail.aspx?id=2007
I am replacing a feed through breaker panel the bus bar and breaker was inverted but the main breaker is up and down with on being down and I also noticed that the plastic in the back that holds the bus bar is cracked.
I bought a newer model from the same manufacture that has a much better design and a better main breaker. But unlike the one I already have when you invert it the breaker slots don't line up and cover does not fit properly. I was thinking about just cutting out the center where the breaker slots are. I measured and if I cut it just right all I have to do is turn it over and it will line up just have to bolt or weld it in place. Would this be legal I also thought about putting the panel the way it came and feeding the bus bar hot and keeping the panel under the 6 throw rule. Or would that not work because I am using feed through. There will be 4 double pole breakers and the one main that feeds a sub panel. I really hate the cheap design of this panel. I plan to replace it with this.
I'm buying a 12 lead Stamford generator, engine driven, and have a question or two about over current protection and ground fault protection. I will normally have it wired for single phase 120 and 240 in the double delta configuration. I may occasionally rewire it for 3 phase 240 in the series delta configuration.
For the single phase setup, what I've read so far leads me to believe I should have a main circuit breaker of about 125% continuous ampacity; it's a 10 kw generator. Is that correct? What kind of breaker do I need? Should this main be a GFCI? Do I bond neutral and ground? This is a portable unit so I need to package a load center on the generator frame. Can I wire one 240 receptacle directly to the main and two or three 120 volt GFCI's on it as well? Or do I need another 240 breaker downstream of the main? What should I be thinking about for swithching back and forth between single phase and three phase? Alot of questions, trying to get smart and be safe. Thanks. |