Henro
Elite Member
- Joined
- Jul 4, 2003
- Messages
- 4,982
- Location
- Few miles north of Pgh, PA
- Tractor
- Kubota B2910, BX2200, KX41-2V mini EX
Gene made it clear he intends to use methods he like's while discarding those he find's unpalatable and that's his privilege. With that in mind,what I say is for the benifit of anyone on the fence. The two quotes above are examples of "good electrical information" you get from self professed "experts" on interweb forums. In post #68, I questioned why people jump into electrical discussions to hand out misleading information. As expected,I was told to go away but here I am again. Sorry Gene but I feel obligated to innocent people that might live with or next door to diy electricians. Electrical isn't complex nor complicated. To the contrary it is extremly predictable but must be fully understood before diving in. A little knowledge is more dangerous than none at all. That bring's us to why I point out the two quotes above. Neutral wires are NEVER used for residential 220 volt circuits. Neutrals occasionally share conduit from load center to an appliance which require's 220 volts AND 110 volts but it never come's into play for 220 volts used by appliance. Tossing neutral around while discussing 220 v will confuse amatueres and result in mistakes. Y'all wire things up any way you please,,,,,,,,so long as you keep everyone else at least 100 yards from your work until you FULLY understand what and why you are doing. Ok boys :fiery::muttering::mischievous::grumpy: let loose.
Jaxs, seeing that you are an expert in the field, I am surprised that you did not point out that the term neutral has been replaced by grounded conductor today. Using the term neutral should have been avoided, and replaced by grounded conductor in what l wrote above. I did not do that as I thought it would just confuse the issue.
If you think a grounded conductor carries no current from the power pole to your service entrance panel in most cases, then you better hit the books again. It only carries zero current when loads are equally balanced between the hot wires and the grounded conductor in a 220 volt circuit. This rarely happens. This is not rocket science.
Of course, with a 220 volt circuit you have no need for the grounded conductor. But the discussion here covered more than a simple 220 volt circuit.
Seems like the only self proclaimed expert here in this thread is you...