4570Man
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Apr 7, 2015
- Messages
- 18,456
- Location
- Crossville, TN
- Tractor
- Kubota M59, Kubota L3800, Grasshopper 428D, Topkick dump truck, 3500 dump truck, 10 ton trailer, more lighter trailers.
Extension cords are a mystery to many...
A friend rented a floor sander and basically could not use it... He used a 16 ga cord on a 15 amp circuit.
I brought over my 10ga cord and miracle of miracles the problem was no more.
The unit was marked use 12ga or better... He thought 16 was better than 12
I've got a lot of heavy 10 and 12 ga cords in my truck...
The skill worm 77 and my emglo compressor demand proper size.
I have custom made cords for everything in my shop using at minimum 12 gauge and 10 if needed. I don’t have a huge demand for cords in my van since most of my stuff is cordless. But if I do have to use a corded saw it always gets a 12 gauge cord. I’ve had to run cords in a customers kitchen windows before to plug into a 12 gauge circuit. Code doesn’t require it but any house I build gets 12 gauge for the garage and exterior outlets. You’d be surprised how common it is for construction guys that you’d think would know better to string out 200 foot of light gauge cords for saws and air compressors. BTW an air hose doesn’t loose anything like a cord does. It’s better to plug the compressor into the source and string out more hose given the option. And you can plug a reserve tank into the end to fix any loss it does incur.
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