joeu235
Platinum Member
- Joined
- Mar 27, 2014
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- 724
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- Little River, TX
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- John Deere 4020 / 6403 / 317 Ford 5600
But anyways, I picked up 10 gauge THHN this morning since that's what code requires.
50amp wire will never melt or fail. It is thermally protected .
But anyways, I picked up 10 gauge THHN this morning since that's what code requires.
So on a Y, the centre is neutral? And at 600, any outer point to neutral is 347?
I built a 600 rotary converter wired in Delta and wondered how to get a ground reference?
Thermally protected by what?
Sorry about derailing your thread.
In a sense, everything is thermally protected. If it gets too hot, it will melt, opening the circuit. Any resulting fire, is a mere side effect.
So on a Y, the centre is neutral? And at 600, any outer point to neutral is 347?
I built a 600 rotary converter wired in Delta and wondered how to get a ground reference?
If code requires 10 gauge and you are certain you are right (since without details we have no idea), what was the purpose of this thread?
I am getting a notion that the difference between short circuit protection and thermal protection is not well understood by most members here.
I would assume that googling Canadian electrical code and table D16 may show the chart. A picture is worth a thousand words .
I was confused thinking about how a load draws half the amps when its converted from 120 to 240.
The more I think about it. The more confused I get. Not a big fan of 600 volts. So the thought of not having a system where if a live 600 volt leg touches a (grounded) metal cabinet, or conduit and a breaker trips, troubled me.
The more I think about it. The more confused I get. Not a big fan of 600 volts. So the thought of not having a system where if a live 600 volt leg touches a (grounded) metal cabinet, or conduit and a breaker trips, troubled me.
Not true. His system is ungrounded. Without a ground there is no current flow to this metal surface. Any one leg can be grounded, but only 1. If you ground 1 leg them a second touches you get instant trip.If a conductor touches the inside of the conduit, it will trip. Those systems are required to be grounded and the breakers have "instatrip" functions where the huge momentary current will trip the breaker in thousandths of a second. A lot different than your house breakers which are mostly thermal.
Not true. His system is ungrounded. Without a ground there is no current flow to this metal surface. Any one leg can be grounded, but only 1. If you ground 1 leg them a second touches you get instant trip.