You are going to have to look at what your electrical supplier carries, or what model breaker fits in your panel. I'd thought you were planning a system and didn't have hardware yet. Midnight Solar carries a wide range of breakers, AC & DC
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I have a Siemens panel. Can you recommend one thats 45 amps?Leave a comment:
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Circuit breakers are also available in styles that don't build up heat and trip at wrong time (magnetic). By the time you blow 1 fuse and replace it, you have spent the cost of a circuit breaker (unless you are working with automotive 12V fuses)Leave a comment:
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Does anyone have an opinion on time delay fuses vs non? Id like to get non because I want it to blow right away but am worried about it blowing prematurely because of the starting amps on the various motors around the house.Leave a comment:
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I have the transfer switch installed now. Everything works great. Im thinking of adding an amp meter and overload protection for the generator. Does anyone have any suggestions which ones to buy? I was thinking of these
https://www.amazon.com/DROK-100-300V-Digital-Multimeter-Amperage/dp/B00DVH64HW/ref=pd_lpo_sbs_328_img_1?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1&refR ID=N2GQAC6TNXFWXYMTAQRW
https://mall.industry.siemens.com/mall/en/ww/Catalog/Product/?mlfb=3NW7122Leave a comment:
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My mistake. Line 1, 2, and the neutral are three conductors, not two.
In order to calculate voltage drop, Im thinking you need to calculate it on these different circuits and use the circuit with highest drop
1. the greatest load at 120 volts
2. the greatest load 240 volts
3. the greatest distance with load at 120 volts
4. the greatest distance with load at 240 volts
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This calculator seems to think I need number 6. Im not sure why. http://www.paigewire.com/pumpWireCalc.aspx
The 75 foot run is from the generator to the transfer switch which is next to the panel. Should I be using the distance from the generator to the furthest outlet instead?
Drop the distance and percentage out and you will get 8 AWG. If you are going to take voltage drop into account use 5% and say 30 amps. 75 feet is not far at 120 volts.Last edited by Sunking; 04-21-2018, 04:38 PM.Leave a comment:
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Ive answered my own question about why that website recommended number 6. Its because theyre using the 60 degree column.Leave a comment:
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Ah yes. I see now. Thanks. I never looked at it that way. THHN is capable of carrying 55 amps under certain conditions. Is the terminal temp referring to the connection between the wire and the load and the load specifies what it is rated at?
Also since there will be only two conductors, a neutral, and a ground in the extension cord, I assume theres no need to derate it further based on the number of conductors.
This calculator seems to think I need number 6. Im not sure why. http://www.paigewire.com/pumpWireCalc.aspx
The 75 foot run is from the generator to the transfer switch which is next to the panel. Should I be using the distance from the generator to the furthest outlet instead?Attached FilesLeave a comment:
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Part of what you are missing wire insulation type is one thing and Terminal temperature is another. Just about all equipment made Terminal Temps use 75 degree C. THHN insulation temp is 90 degree which is used for derating purposes when the wire is in a raceway with more than 3 current carrying conductors. If you put enough wires in a conduit a 6 AWG can be derated to 20 amps maximum. So when an engineer has to derate will select a higher temp insulation for more derated capacity than a 75 degree insulation.
So what you missed is the Terminal Temp is 75 degree C and thus you would use ampacities on the 75 degree column of your chart. There you will see 8 AWG is 50 amps, and 6AWG is 65 amps.
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The breaker is 46A. Which makes sense because 11,000/240 is 46. This chart says number 8 THHN is good to 55 amps. Why does it say that? What am I missing?Leave a comment:
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Minimum size is determined by the size of the Breaker. 8 AWG up to 40 amps, 6 AWG up to 60 amps.Leave a comment:
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My generator is 13,500 peak and 11,000 running watts. Its a 75 foot run from the generator to the transfer switch. Id like to use number 8 THHN instead of number 6 for the 75 foot run. Number 6 is $490 and number 8 is only $106. Is number 8 ok to use?
Edit: The number 6 is $60 more so I bought that.Last edited by BigRich; 04-22-2018, 02:54 PM.Leave a comment:
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Thats three times this site has cut off my post for using an apostrophe.
That's because your post has non windows, non standard characters in it, and the site filter thinks it's a spammer trying to use foreign letters and numerals to create posts
Try writing in the simplest word processor (windows notepad) and copy and paste from there, works like a champ, unless you set windows up with foreign character sets.Leave a comment:
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