Resistor/led And Basic Electricity QuestionsSimilar Tutorials
How to Lay Sod - The Right Way!
- Make sure the green side faces up! And, there are a few more steps if you want to ensure a nice looking lawn. Prepa ...
The Difference Between Volts, Amps, and Watts
- This article explains the difference between Volts, Amps, and Watts in an easy-to-understand non-scientific way. T ...
Water is Leaking from the Toilet – What do I do? (How to replace the wax seal for a toilet.)
- If there is water leaking from the toilet, you need to make sure that you know from where the water is leaking. Che ... Similar Topics From Forums
I am in the process of designing our new kitchen. The design calls for a free-standing island that needs electricity for a range/stove. The spot where the island is going currently has no electricity.
The floor is tile on concrete. The house is in Florida (no basement). How do I run electricity to the island?
Why won't my Briggs and straton 5500 generator generate any electricity?
I've only been here a short while but I've seen enough posts from non-professionals that are difficult to understand because they are not familiar with electrical terminology that I thought we needing something so they can better communicate with us what the problem is.
I created an image with the basic items you'd find in a house thinking if we all got together and created a thread to help the non-pros explain their problems we could ask for it to be a sticky requesting non-pros read it before asking their questions. Let me know what you think and suggest any additions, changes, etc you think would help us help them.
First off, I have read a majority of the posts concerning this subject and they have been very helpful and answered many questions, but I still have a few.
I am wanting to run power to a detached shed that is around 100 feet from the house. However, due to the location of my main panel and the easiest route to run the power, I am looking at running cable about 270 feet. I measured it out to exactly 263 feet, but figured it would be best to go longer. I am wanting to run at least 60 amps to the shed, as I won't be using it for nothing more then power outlets (basic power tools) and lights. Here are my questions: 1) What cable would be best for such a long distance run? 2) Would a 60 amp subpanel be sufficient for this job. I am looking at only 4 circuits: 1 for internal outlets, 1 for lighting, 1 for motion sensor light outside and 1 for external outlet. I am looking at the following panel: http://www.homedepot.com/Electrical-...&storeId=10051 I have seen some marked 70 amp and wondering if they make a difference: http://www.homedepot.com/Electrical-...&storeId=10051 3) Also, I will be installing a 30 amp RV connector circuit from my main panel to the where I park my Camper Trailer, which is a run of about 75 feet. What would be the best cable for this sort of run under ground? Can I run both cable together in the same conduit until I junction if off to where I will be installing the plug for the camper? 4) Would the following be the circuit breakers to use: 60 amp - http://www.homedepot.com/h_d1/N-5yc1...&storeId=10051 30 amp - http://www.homedepot.com/h_d1/N-5yc1...&storeId=10051 I think that is it for now. Thanks in advance for all your help!!
Hey there,
I'm kind of a noob to the electrical feild so i'm sorry if this is a really basic question but I wanted to know if I could connect this circuit to something like this http://www.pegasuslighting.com/elect...paltr60pi.html Could anyone give me any ideas on how i could do it?
Hey all, new to the forum and had a few questions about the electric I plan on installing in my basement I am working on finishing. Here is what the plans call for...
- Bathroom - 2 Lights, one GFCI, vent fan - Home theater - Projector, Sound system, various other electronics - General Lighting throughout - 14 Recessed lights approx 60 watt bulbs - 14 outlets - Mini bar fridge I will have to run the line from the garage to the basement and my question is should I go 15 or 20 and will I need more than one line to support this? Any info or direction you guys can give would be greatly appreciated!! Tom
I'm in the final stages of a rough in.... three questions:
1) Do the feeds to the panel need to be in the panel but not connected or is it ok to just have them pulled over by the panel 2) I've got can lights in a drop ceiling - do I just staple the cable to the joist in the area the light will go and coil up the excess? 3) I have an outlet and a switch that I can't disconnect right now(sump pump and a stairway light) but these will be going on new circuits I pulled. Obviously I can't get the box ready, can I just pull the cable and have it there by the existing box? I thought about putting in a new box, but there really is no space for the outlet and we like where the switch is. I'd call the inspector and ask his preference but it is a voicemail box that has been full for a week. Thanks.
Greetings all.
This is my first post here, I hope it goes well. My name is Joe and I have searched Google. and this forum for my answer but have not been able to find a definitive answer to my question. I have seen many replies talking about getting a tone generator or a line tracer but my experience is that tone generators are for Data and phone cables rather than electrical cables and the line tracers I've found online all seem to be about tracing the line back to the breaker panel so without knowing more I'm hesitant to purchase a line tracer in case it cannot do what I want. My dilemma is very likely very simple to anyone with electrical experience so I hope it's not too trivial for this crowd. I have recently purchased a house that is over 120 years old and have a motion sensor light on the porch that is supposedly connected to a switch inside but does not turn on. I've opened the wall plate and used a voltage indicating pen to see where the electricity is. In this case there are two light switches, one that has lines that have been spliced and another that supposedly leads to the porch light according to a long time tenant in that unit. It all looks like a bit of a mess and the connections don't make sense. In this scenario the black cables have the electricity and the white cables complete the circuit. The switch to the porch light has a black cable coming from the top of the box going to the switch and a white cable connected to the other screw that comes from splitting the white cable from the other switch. What I would like to do is know which cables in that wall box correspond to the cables to the porch light. Can anyone give me an idea what I should do? Do I need something like the Amprobe advanced wire tracer (http://www.professionalequipment.com...0/wire-tracer/) and can it do what I need, or is there something simpler I can do? All help is appreciated. Thanks Joe
I'm getting ready to dig a trench to run electricity from my house to my garage. Along with an electrical line, I would also like to run a line for my air compressor. I would like to keep my compressor in my basement and have a line for it in the garage. Does anyone have any tips for how to properly bury an air compressor hose? I searched on Google a bit, but couldn't really find exactly what I was looking for. Thanks.
Jesse
I am considering adding solar panels to my home to generate electricity. I will not add batteries however (to expensive) so when the grid goes down I won't get energy from the panels (you need a special inverter and batteries) so I want to add a portable gas generator for those, hopefully, limited cases.
I just wondered how the solar wiring gets interfaced into my system (breaker panel?) and can I later add a transfer switch or interlock switch when I add the generator? Or should I do that at the same time (perhaps the interface is complicated)? Thoughts? Thx |