Here is a photo of the main panel and the shop breakers.
I do remember the wire to the subpanel being copper.
After seeing your picture you have 100 amps feeding the sub panel and would be sufficient to handle the wielder along with the existing circuit. the handle tie on the red Bryant breaker would no longer meet a code requirement.![]()
I figured everything would be covered here but I notice there wasn't much discussion on the size of the welder circuit. Most home use welders are going with something like a 180 amp MIG these days, which seems to do almost anything you need. You can run these pretty hard on a 30 amp circuit, which is an economical installation. You will probably need to use a 50 amp plug/outlet, but don't let that confuse you. You can wire that up with no. 10 wiring as long as you have 30 amp breakers.
Lincoln, in particular, is very confusing on what service is required for their welders, but I have a Lincoln 180 on a 30 amp circuit and it has never been a problem. I found a Ebay seller with a real deal on 10/3 SOOW cable (braided, thick flexible insulation) and made a 60 ft. extension cord and life is now good.
I figured everything would be covered here but I notice there wasn't much discussion on the size of the welder circuit. Most home use welders are going with something like a 180 amp MIG these days, which seems to do almost anything you need. You can run these pretty hard on a 30 amp circuit, which is an economical installation. You will probably need to use a 50 amp plug/outlet, but don't let that confuse you. You can wire that up with no. 10 wiring as long as you have 30 amp breakers.
Lincoln, in particular, is very confusing on what service is required for their welders, but I have a Lincoln 180 on a 30 amp circuit and it has never been a problem. I found a Ebay seller with a real deal on 10/3 SOOW cable (braided, thick flexible insulation) and made a 60 ft. extension cord and life is now good.
NOPE: you SHOULD NOT wire a 50 amp outlet with #10 for a 30 amp circuit. This gives a future potential problem in that someone else down the line can assume that this 50 amp outlet is set up for a 50 amp circuit, and this causes problems. if you use a 50 amp receptacle, please wire it for 50 amps. better to have more power available than you need.
The NEC does not allow you to do this. it may work, but isnt right.
i'm thinking that as long as the breaker and wire size match, an overrated receptacle is not an issue? if you plug a larger than allowable device in, it will only trip the breaker. i can't quote the code, but i can't see where there is any safety issue. i would think it would fall into the same category as my above post where i mentioned mismatched breaker/wire sizing. i came across that two (maybe three) years ago when i wired my garage for a welder. maybe something has changed? i agree that these situations are not ideal, but from what i read they are legal, acceptable, and safe, as long as they are done properly.
edit: as i said, i'm not a pro, but i did a lot of research before i did my shop. search for nec article 630 and read up if interested. i figured i'd add this to curb any rule of thumb debates that spawn due to my posts that do not necessarily support, but at the very least add legitimacy to this procedure.
i'm thinking that as long as the breaker and wire size match, an overrated receptacle is not an issue?
I am not a pro either but I agree with this.
You see 20A 120v recepticles wired with 14ga and a 15 amp breaker all the time. Same difference here.
Oversizing the recepticle/plug is not a problem
Oversizing the wire is not a problem
Oversizing the breaker...BIG PROBLEM
The code does allow a 20 amp or a 15 amp receptacle wired to a 20 amp circuit in RESIDENTIAL situations only. in commercial it does not allow this.
As you can see in the above PDF chart. Its very specific in the 30 and 50 amp ratings.
Hay, i dont write these **** rules, i only have to follow them
I dont agree with them
Kinda odd how they will allow a 15A recepticle on a 20A circuit.
That sounds more dangerous than a 20a recepticle on a 15a circuit:confused2:
The section on receptacles really surprises me. Does the exception referring to 630.11 allow a 50A receptacle on a lighter circuit? (I don't have a code book.) In my experience, it's a really common practice to put 50A receptacles on 30A circuits, pushed in part by welder manufacturers putting those 50A cords on machines that don't require it.
I don't know why they do it, but I don't think you could ever run my Lincoln 180 hard enough to pop a 30A breaker and most people could probably get by with a 20 amp.
Not replying to anyone in particular. The NEC does allow 15A or 20A receptacles on a 20A circuit, provided there are more than 2 or more receptacles on that circuit. No restriction commercial or residential. NEC 210.21(B)(3).
The welder outlet can be supplied with #10AWG wire and protected by a 50A breaker. Look at the Overcurrent Protection for conductors in NEC 630.12(B). The wires can be protected at not more than 200% of the conductor ampacity. Article 240.3 specifically points you to Article 630 for conductors supplying a welder. The ampacity charts in NEC 310 no longer apply.
Enforcing the NEC has been my life for the last 23 years. I've taken flak before for posting the above, but that's OK, I have my appropriate PPE on.......LOL
yeiks.......#10 MAY be rated for 50 amps ?? where do yo find this little tid bit?
Kinda odd how they will allow a 15A recepticle on a 20A circuit.
That sounds more dangerous than a 20a recepticle on a 15a circuit:confused2:
Well think about it this way - you plug in a lamp to that 15 or 20A outlet. The lamp has 18 ga cord (pretty common). 18 ga isn't rated for even close to 15A, much less 20A so how is that allowed? For single family residential outlets, the code allows you some leeway with 15 & 20 A outlets, mostly as a convenience, IMHO. It allows you more flexibility to wire outlets on a 20A circuit for less breaker tripping potential, without requiring the 20A plug. An actual 20a 120V plug is pretty rare, but I have seen them a couple times in my life.