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#1 (permalink) |
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Silver Member
Join Date: Jul 2000
Location: Eastern Kentucky
Posts: 190
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My Uncle gave me a lincoln AC stick welder. My brother inlaw dragged in some 8/3 SO wire. I thought about running about 5 ft. from the breaker box in the barn using the 8/3 and installing a plug and using the remaining 50 ft as a movable line with a male and a female end. That way I could have the same set up and move to the shop and other barn when I needed to.
Question one: Is 8/3 so large enough for the 50 amp welder? Question two: What size breaker would be the best ? Thanks in advance, Patrick |
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#3 (permalink) |
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Silver Member
Join Date: Jul 2000
Location: Eastern Kentucky
Posts: 190
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Franz thanks for the reply. I wasn't sure about the setup myself so I thought I would ask. I'm still not sure about the breaker size though. Should I use a double 30, 40 or a 50?
Patrick |
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#6 (permalink) |
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Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: South Central Oklahoma
Posts: 1,390
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I bought a used extension cord about a hundred feet long with 4 conductors. I think it was #6 wire but I don't recall for sure. I cut it into two pieces. One is about 30 something feet long and the other 60 something feet long. I wired up 250 volt 50 amp plugs and sockets. I can run my 50 amp 240 volt welder on either or both (in series) and weld a hundred feet from a dryer type outlet anywhere one can be found. I don't recall the gauge but it does not heat up and the welder works fine at full power. I included 2 duplex 120 volt 20 amp outlets in the box I put the socket/outlet to have power for my 120 volt welder or for grinder, lights, fan, whatever... I paralleled two of the conductors on one leg of the 240 to reduce overall line loss a bit because I wanted to get something out of lugging its weight.
In my shop bld I have a 25 foot coil of two conductor + gnd #4 with a dryer outlet on the end. This lets me have some mobility before I have to drag out the BIG extension cord. I have this circuit on a dual 50 amp breaker. Happy welding! Patrick |
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#7 (permalink) |
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Silver Member
Join Date: Jul 2000
Location: Eastern Kentucky
Posts: 190
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I did end up going with a double fifty and 5 ft of the eight 3 and a female. I also had the guy run 12/2 of a 20 amp breaker in the box that my fencer was connected to. We went into the box and back out into the fencer outlet that was clamped there. This left me with enough wire to attach it to it's own breaker if the ground fault outlet the fencer was plugged into caused any problem in the future. I used all the spare electrical parts I had laying around. This was because the electrician was a good friend that I conned into coming over on a saturday night for a freebee. But my wife has trouble getting excatly what I send her after, she does well though most times and it did save me from a trip into town. I haven't got back to that barn though since I've been finishing the lot fence and baling some second cutting this week after school. Patrick sounds like a good setup for some future projects, have fun.
Patrick |
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#9 (permalink) |
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Join Date: Apr 2000
Location: Peculiar, MO
Posts: 349
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what you mean is that you can use this wire up to 40 amps, you can use less current and fuse lighter, say 30 amp if that is the load. You can not fuse let say for 41 amps. But you can underfuse to match the load. The real question is why would you select wire much larger than neede if you mdid not have it on hand.
Dan L |
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#10 (permalink) |
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Gold Member
Join Date: Jul 2001
Posts: 431
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As stated by others, 8/3 and a 40 amp breaker should be fine - you can go to 6 gauge and 50 amps if your unit requires such, but most don't. BTW, what is the line going to your barn/garage? I had a friend who put in great wiring - 6 gauge - for his new welder, and then discovered the line from his house, a couple of hundred feet away, to his (added on by a previous owner) garage fuse box was 8 gauge (inside a conduit coming up from the floor, so he couldn't easily ascertain such).
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