- Location
- Chapel Hill, NC
- Occupation
- Retired Electrical Contractor
I only want Cuban. Then I'll sell them to someone who smokes.:grin:I think Dennis wins the prize on this one. Give the man a cigar. :grin:
I only want Cuban. Then I'll sell them to someone who smokes.:grin:I think Dennis wins the prize on this one. Give the man a cigar. :grin:
Correct... 150% of the appliance rating- that is 16.24 *1.5= 24.4. I had a typo in my last part of the other post- I had 15.25 instead of 16.25....Thanks Dennis for the 422.13 guidance. I appreciate the knowlege I gain from this site.
To make sure I understand, the calculated load is 16.25 amps. The branch circuit must be rated at 125 % of this = 20.3 amps. 422.11(E)(3) applies to the 16.25 amp load = 24.4 amps not the 20.3 amps @ 150 % = 30.5 amps. Right?
Correct... 150% of the appliance rating- that is 16.24 *1.5= 24.4. I had a typo in my last part of the other post- I had 15.25 instead of 16.25....
I would leave it at 30 so if when they replace element with a true 4500/ 208 it is ready. Is no hazard just lower voltage resulting in lower load. Kinda nit picking for nothing
I give jim the the cuban cigar , since the name plate doesnt show 208 , a person could connect to 120 v and not be any worse violation than 208 if it is a violation at all , and yes it will get hot eventually I know because during storm I got some hot water from a 120 v generator by moving one of the hot on breaker to neutral. So every one is saying I should have changed the breaker to 9.37 x 150 = 14.07 or 15 amp ? I will be sure to do that next time till storm passes LOL
I give jim the the cuban cigar , since the name plate doesnt show 208 , a person could connect to 120 v and not be any worse violation than 208 if it is a violation at all , and yes it will get hot eventually I know because during storm I got some hot water from a 120 v generator by moving one of the hot on breaker to neutral. So every one is saying I should have changed the breaker to 9.37 x 150 = 14.07 or 15 amp ? I will be sure to do that next time till storm passes LOL
I had small trailer many many years ago and put in water heater 20 gal 240 on 120. Was better than ice cold water but not much
back then i was not an lektican or plummermaybe I should not have said hot, it would if covered with insulation enough, the low wattage is not a lot above the heat loss thru the WH, You could have gotten a 120v element to install in the WH you know , will heat the 20 gal just fine
maybe I should not have said hot, it would if covered with insulation enough, the low wattage is not a lot above the heat loss thru the WH, You could have gotten a 120v element to install in the WH you know , will heat the 20 gal just fine
I had small trailer many many years ago and put in water heater 20 gal 240 on 120. Was better than ice cold water but not much
Okay let's assume that the heater is listed for 208 volts-- not sure why it wouldn't be....
As the OP states the wattage, using ohm's law, at 208 volts=3380. Divide by 208 and we get 16.25 amps.
Now go to 422.11(E) -- the ocpd cannot be larger than 150%-- 15.25 equal 24.4 amps. Thus, IMO a 25 amp breaker is req as (E)(3) allows you to go to the next standard size from 24.4-- that is a 25 amp breaker.
422.11(E)(3) requires a maximum of 150% of the rated current. This water heater is rated at 4500 Watts @ 240 volts. I would say that the water heater is rated at 18.75 amps. Just because we apply a lesser voltage doesn't cause it to loose its ability to handle 18.75 amps. 150% of 18.75 amps is 28 amps. Next size up is a 30 amp breaker
422.11(E)(3) requires a maximum of 150% of the rated current. This water heater is rated at 4500 Watts @ 240 volts. I would say that the water heater is rated at 18.75 amps. Just because we apply a lesser voltage doesn't cause it to loose its ability to handle 18.75 amps. 150% of 18.75 amps is 28 amps. Next size up is a 30 amp breaker
422.11(E)(3) requires a maximum of 150% of the rated current. This water heater is rated at 4500 Watts @ 240 volts. I would say that the water heater is rated at 18.75 amps. Just because we apply a lesser voltage doesn't cause it to loose its ability to handle 18.75 amps. 150% of 18.75 amps is 28 amps. Next size up is a 30 amp breaker