JHZR2
Member
- Location
- New Jersey
- Occupation
- Power Systems Engineer
Situation is that there is a long run of conductor, feeding an 18-19A load for a portable 120V air compressor that gets moved around. Currently is a 20A Eaton CH breaker protecting 12ga to receptacle, then 10ga from the receptacle into the compressor. Compressor runs suitably, but overall conductor length results in voltage at motor being a little bit lower than I'd like. Would like to upgrade the conductor from the panel to the receptacle, but the receptacle has a run through a wall and a few other reasons that Id prefer to not pull conductor through. Instead, Id like to make a junction in a simple, accessible, exposed location (in the basement), to connect the 10ga run to the remnant 12ga to the receptacle. This would result in maybe 2ft of 12ga in the run.
So were talking about turning it into the following:
Breaker - 10ga (25ft) - junction - 12ga (2ft) - receptacle - 10ga (60ft) - load
We could run the calculations and see that a foot or two of 12ga conductor adds miniscule voltage drop and heating. But are there other practical reasons why this should be avoided?
The compressor sees very sporadic use, requires some mobility, and hard wiring it in place with one continuous 10ga run is not in play here.
Thanks!
So were talking about turning it into the following:
Breaker - 10ga (25ft) - junction - 12ga (2ft) - receptacle - 10ga (60ft) - load
We could run the calculations and see that a foot or two of 12ga conductor adds miniscule voltage drop and heating. But are there other practical reasons why this should be avoided?
The compressor sees very sporadic use, requires some mobility, and hard wiring it in place with one continuous 10ga run is not in play here.
Thanks!
