sberry
Banned
Yes you put a 9 watt lamp on a 20A circuit but it doesn't use a 9 watt wire. All the listed smaller stuff is designed to be plugged in to a 20A circuit. The breaker is protecting the line from thermal as well as faults but it is there to protect against short circuit up to the point of any additional protection within the device. Do we really think that we could just hook and wire all this equipment to these circuits and hope for the best?Don't you plug a 9 Watt (60 watt equivalent) led table lamp that draws .075 amps into 120 volt receptacle that is on a 20 amp breaker. The breaker and receptacle in this case are sized for the maximum current it can supply. It does not make a device draw any more than it is supposed to. A 120 volt grinder plugged into a receptacle can be pulling a lot less than the the 20 amp breaker that is protecting the line. The breaker is protecting the line that is wired for that amount of current, max. On a dedicated line the breaker can be sized to protect the device but that is often not the case with smaller stuff. I would have no problem putting a 50Amp plug on a grinder so I could plug it into a dedicated welder receptacle But that is me. I am sure I will get opposing opinions.
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How do you figure this? You made a cheater to by pass a safety feature and its ok because its an adapter?As long as it is a plug in adaptor you are ok.
As for me being confusing its not so much me as the lack of understanding that makes it confusing.
What I am telling you is not an opinion. None of this is my opinion.I am sure I will get opposing opinions.
