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- Newsgroups: misc.consumers.house
- Path: sparky!uunet!murphy!jpradley!magpie!manes
- From: manes@magpie.nycenet.edu (Steve Manes)
- Subject: Re: "balancing" a power panel
- Organization: Manes and Associates, NYC
- Date: Thu, 31 Dec 1992 06:24:04 GMT
- Message-ID: <C041s5.HrE@magpie.nycenet.edu>
- X-Newsreader: TIN [version 1.1 PL7]
- References: <1992Dec30.175625.17689@phx.mcd.mot.com>
- Lines: 22
-
- Fred Christiansen (fredch@phx.mcd.mot.com) wrote:
- : What does "balancing" a power panel mean? Why is it necessary? How
- : is it typically accomplished? Yes, I know I can ask my electrician,
- : but the Net often has many gems of wisdom which I would not get from
- : a non-talkative tradesman. Thx.
-
- Two legs of 110 VAC reside in your breaker box. A 220V breaker would
- attach to both of them (110V + 110V = 220V). Your 110V breakers would
- attach to one or the other of these legs. Balancing the panel means
- not having, for instance, a 110V/20 amp wall heater and a 10 amp
- refrigerator and a 15 amp freezer and all your kitchen outlets on
- the same 110V leg inside the panel because, eventually, the heater
- and the fridge and the freezer will all be running at the same time
- (drawing peak 45 amps) and you will turn on your microwave and blow
- out one side of your main breaker, bringing half the house into
- darkness. You want to distribute the household load evenly between
- each leg of 110v.
-
- --
- Stephen Manes manes@magpie.nycenet.edu
- Manes and Associates/Commontech-NoHo New York, NY, USA =o&>o
-
-