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On a 115 volt welder whether stick or mig, is there any advantage to plugging these into a 30 amp circuit?
Plug it into a 20 amp circuit and turn it all the way up. If you can run a bead without popping the breaker, there's no advantage. If you pop the breaker, then there's an advantage.
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On a 115 volt welder whether stick or mig, is there any advantage to plugging these into a 30 amp circuit?
Plug it into a 20 amp circuit and turn it all the way up. If you can run a bead without popping the breaker, there's no advantage. If you pop the breaker, then there's an advantage.
NEXT!
Yes. Regardless of a 20 A breaker holding, the performancece advantage is with the higher amp circuit due less voltage loss in the larger wiring.Cant hurt. If you have the 30amp already available, I'd use it. That 30amp should be wired with at least 10ga wire which will have much less voltage drop and allow more current draw than the 15amp or 20amp which will be wired with 14ga or 12ga respectively.
Yes. Regardless of a 20 A breaker holding, the performancece advantage is with the higher amp circuit due less voltage loss in the larger wiring.
larry
Help me out with that, if you would? My thinking would be that a given load is going to pull a given number of watts, and that is constant. If voltage is lower, amps will go up (and so will heat in the wire), but the wattage will always be the same. So take a welder that is operating at max output on 110v current and it pulls 19 amps = 2090 watts. Now it's on a circuit with less voltage drop and it's getting 120v. It pulls 17 amps instead of 19, but otherwise, it performs exactly the same, doesn't it?
Yes. Regardless of a 20 A breaker holding, the performancece advantage is with the higher amp circuit due less voltage loss in the larger wiring.
larry
Help me out with that, if you would? My thinking would be that a given load is going to pull a given number of watts, and that is constant. If voltage is lower, amps will go up (and so will heat in the wire), but the wattage will always be the same. So take a welder that is operating at max output on 110v current and it pulls 19 amps = 2090 watts. Now it's on a circuit with less voltage drop and it's getting 120v. It pulls 17 amps instead of 19, but otherwise, it performs exactly the same, doesn't it?
Nope - the larger supply wire size causes less drop in supply voltage - having a higher voltage available to the welder means that, for any given electrical resistance/impedance, a larger current can flow.
This is ignoring any change in the welder's input resistance due to the possibility of more heating ( resistance of all metals varies with temperature - some have positive temp coefficient, some negative. As in, warmer could mean either more or less resistance, which would also enter in.
But basically, if you have more voltage available at the input, you get more current out... Steve
Temperature Coefficient of Copper
I appreciate your question ... and these good answers. I have very little to add, and some may be confusing. Briefly:It needs to be fed enough volts and amps in the first place. If you have too much voltage drop and/or too small a wire its like drinking a shake through a stirring stick..
,,, Other welders can be just a variable transformer. These putout lower V as the input V goes down. Altho V can drop a bit before you notice a performance change, its not too hard to see that yould like voltage to be nominal so theyld work as well as they can.
larry