220v outlet for welder powered by (2) 20 amp breakers

   / 220v outlet for welder powered by (2) 20 amp breakers #161  
I thought once you black tape both ends of a white wire it's no longer considered a neutral, it's being used as a hot.
well yes and no. strictly according to NEC code, you cannot change a wire color by marking it for wires smaller than #6. but most jurisdictions allow the white wire to be colored in residential #12-#6 wires as long as at least 6" of the wire is colored. Cant do this in commercial applications. what this jaxs character is alluding to is calling the white a neutral. hes mixing semantics. almost everyone recognizes a white wire as a neutral conductor. its true you cant use a neutral for a 240....it wouldnt work all you would get is 120V. . the op was wanting to use the old neutral (white) WIRE as the 2nd wire of a 240 by replacing the breaker with a 240 pole breaker and re-landing white wire on the breaker. totally legal and acceptable AS LONG AS THAT WHITE WIRE is not used on any other circuit. and the OP understands that. Jaxs is just a troller that is trying to cause trouble.
 
   / 220v outlet for welder powered by (2) 20 amp breakers #162  
Keep in mind that the neutral is the center tap of the transformer, and will give half the voltage of the end taps when connected with either one of them.
The entire service feeding all the breakers is a
‘Common Neutral” circuit.
At the service equipment, the neutral is grounded, on all downstream equipment, the ground and neutral are separated and the neutral Buss is not bonded to the enclosure.
Understanding this is far more important than the conventions used for wire colors.
 
   / 220v outlet for welder powered by (2) 20 amp breakers
  • Thread Starter
#163  
Gene,I believe your intentions are good and so are mine. What it take's at least a couple of years to learn can't be explained in 25 words or less and it's foolish to ask someone to try. Just look where this is after more than 150 posts. Shine ? I have no desire to shine. Trying to shine is what some have done and it only lead to confusion.
Look at it like this. A man is sitting in the cockpit of an airplane idling on the tarmac and ask's how do I get this thing to fly? A surgeon can mark the spot to open your buddy for surgery and explain every detail on completing the proceedure but you will likly kill your friend. How bout completing a 1040 with instructions right in front of you? Few can do it so they hire it out,,,,,,,,,again and again. My favorite is asking how to give one's self a haircut. Compared to electric work,there's very little risk aside to making yourself look stupid. If it's money you want to save,give yourself hair cuts and see how well you shine.

Oh Jaxs, I've been giving myself haircuts for years, and I do my own taxes (both personal and business/payroll), repairs/remodels at home, and a bunch of other stuff including electrical (just yesterday completed the 220v in my shop). I do all that coz a) I enjoy it, and b) I don't do any worse a job than a hired pro would....because I research the crap out of stuff (what I was doing here in this thread), and put love into it.

If you can't explain it, that's on you, you need better communication skills.
 
   / 220v outlet for welder powered by (2) 20 amp breakers #164  
Gene, have you had time to do some welds on your new 220/240 volt circuit with your new welder yet? I bet you will enjoy the way it works.
 
   / 220v outlet for welder powered by (2) 20 amp breakers
  • Thread Starter
#165  
well yes and no. strictly according to NEC code, you cannot change a wire color by marking it for wires smaller than #6. but most jurisdictions allow the white wire to be colored in residential #12-#6 wires as long as at least 6" of the wire is colored. Cant do this in commercial applications. what this jaxs character is alluding to is calling the white a neutral. hes mixing semantics. almost everyone recognizes a white wire as a neutral conductor. its true you cant use a neutral for a 240....it wouldnt work all you would get is 120V. . the op was wanting to use the old neutral (white) WIRE as the 2nd wire of a 240 by replacing the breaker with a 240 pole breaker and re-landing white wire on the breaker. totally legal and acceptable AS LONG AS THAT WHITE WIRE is not used on any other circuit. and the OP understands that. Jaxs is just a troller that is trying to cause trouble.

To be fair, I didn't even consider it. But then neither did Jaxs initially, his first gripe here was GFCIs on the garage circuit. In any case, all of you guys really helped me, ALL you guys, Jaxs and Dale too.

I forgot which one of you was recommending a 50 amp subpanel, that's what I ended up with in the shop. Actually, I already had 2 subpanels in there, 1 being the main cutoff for 220v going to a phase converter, and that goes to a 2nd subpanel for 3-phase machinery. I tapped into that 2nd subpanel coz I had room in there (first panel is full), ran conduit with 6 ga wire, 50 amp breaker on the L1 and L2.
 
   / 220v outlet for welder powered by (2) 20 amp breakers
  • Thread Starter
#166  
Gene, have you had time to do some welds on your new 220/240 volt circuit with your new welder yet? I bet you will enjoy the way it works.

Today is the day, K0ua! Wiring was the easy part, what took a long time was emptying all the standup shelves lining that wall so that I could move them, then putting everything back the way I need it. I'm very **** about having everything organized, so I fuss with that a alot.
 
   / 220v outlet for welder powered by (2) 20 amp breakers #167  
I have 59 amp 240 in my garage for my welder also, but never used it. Due to smoke and mess i did all my welding in shop. Plus i have respirator system in shop for when i weld galvanized metal...which i used to do alot. Not much anymore.

I also research stuff online that i wish to do myself. When old washer needed a new tub seal, repairman wanted $600 to do it. I bought the seal and did it myself in about 90 minutes. Youtube rocks. Same with compressor fan on my refrigerator. Did it myself for WAY less money. I always just refer to it as being self sufficient. Last week i had a neighbor call me cause his portable generator wasnt running during power outage. He couldnt figure it out. Turned out it was way low on oil. He never serviced it, didnt even have any oil on hand. Personally, i cant stand not having parts in my shop for stuff i own. I have extra everything. I dont jus5 drop the thing off to repairman, i fix it myself. Alot of this stuff im not trained to do, so i ask questions and look it up online.

But there are limits. I dont feel like repairing an automatic transmisdion for example.
 
   / 220v outlet for welder powered by (2) 20 amp breakers #168  
wrong, wrong and wrong. Neutral (white) wires can be used in residential 220 circuits...legally. As an example running a 10/2 romex for a 30 amp welder. Inspectors allow this with white wires blacked out. Use it all the time, and legal. Now under strict interpretation of NEC any wire under #6 cannot be phase taped, they allow it for residential. Another common use of white wire carrying hot load is use of 12/2 romex for a dead end switch leg. Phase tape or color white leg. Acceptable. Now for your Description of me a a internet electrician...i have 37 years as a calif and idaho electrical contractor to counteract that statement.

Once you phase tape a conductor the insulation color no longer has meaning....

Dale
 
   / 220v outlet for welder powered by (2) 20 amp breakers #169  
Oh Jaxs, I've been giving myself haircuts for years, and I do my own taxes (both personal and business/payroll), repairs/remodels at home, and a bunch of other stuff including electrical (just yesterday completed the 220v in my shop). I do all that coz a) I enjoy it, and b) I don't do any worse a job than a hired pro would....because I research the crap out of stuff (what I was doing here in this thread), and put love into it.

If you can't explain it, that's on you, you need better communication skills.


Gene, maybe the next thing he tells ya might be, don't work on your tractor because tractor owners are not qualified for those task, good grief.

KC
 
   / 220v outlet for welder powered by (2) 20 amp breakers #170  
But you don't have it correct either, there is a ground conductor that is a SAFETY GROUND and is ties common to a driven ground rod at entrance panel and bonded to NEUTRAL bar in primary distribution cabinet..... The terms "ground" and "neutral " are not synonymous.... THE safety ground will always be a green wire or green wire with yellow stripe, or maybe black wire with green tape identification (if all entrance wires are basically black) ...The neutral wire will always be a return current carrier in a 120v circuit and will never be referred to as a "ground"...Also per code the neutral wire will be white and should never be used as a "hot" leg, but always at return....

The term 220 v is being pushed around here with a lot of misinformation as to the "Edison Circuit"......It is not a 220 volt circuit it is two 120v circuits with common neutral....Which is different from a 220 volt circuit that is a 3 wire (L1-L2 & SG) or 4 wire (L1-L2-N & SG) for a device within a appliance (like electric drier) that may have need for 120 volts also, maybe to run motor....

National Electrical Code - Multiwire Branch Circuit | Transworld Electric


Dale

Dale, actually I do have it correct.

AND keep in mind the safety ground does not have to have a color at all. It can be bare copper.

If you do not recognize the difference between grounded conductor and safety ground please take another look at the subject. There IS a reason neutral is not the preferred term this century.

This pi$$ing contest is of little help to the OP. My last post on this one.

Frankly at this point I am confused as to why we have diverged from the original question.

By the way, a 220 volt circuit is NOT two single 110 volt circuits sharing a neutral. It is a 220 volt source center tapped in the middle. Net result is the current flowing in the common leg is the difference between the currents in each 110 volt side. Current in the common wire can be any value between zero and breaker rating. It is ABSOLUTELY NOT two 110 volt circuits sharing a common wire. Unless you understand the concept phase difference, which causes currents in the common wire to cancel out.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

Flat Deck Trailer (A50322)
Flat Deck Trailer...
2007 FORD F-750XL SUPER DUTY DUMP TRUCK (A50459)
2007 FORD F-750XL...
2014 Ford F-150 XL Ext. Cab Pickup Truck (A50323)
2014 Ford F-150 XL...
Hyster H155XL Forklift (A48837)
Hyster H155XL...
2018 PETERBILT 579 DAY CAB (A51222)
2018 PETERBILT 579...
2019 Fontaine Traverse HT T/A 48ft Loyboy Trailer (A49461)
2019 Fontaine...
 
Top