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Heavy duty extension cord

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PCustoms

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House up the road got sold. New owners are cleaning out all the contents so they will have room for their own ****. Everything FREE. So I got ther a little late, and a lot of it had been picked over, but I found this. I never knew such a thing existed. BC3E9ED1-D0A0-4FAB-9B90-0A4E113E4C0F.jpeg

WTF

So all the talk lately about why to use 20A outlets and here you go....

Confused what they're going for picking up both halves. Maybe it's assuming industrial duplex outlets wired to separate circuits?
 

mm08822

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Jan 13, 2012
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NJ
WTF

So all the talk lately about why to use 20A outlets and here you go....

Confused what they're going for picking up both halves. Maybe it's assuming industrial duplex outlets wired to separate circuits?
They have to assume seperate circuits in their design, otherwise they would inevitably find the location of the needle in the haystack.

I wonder how few of these were sold.
 

PCustoms

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VT
They have to assume seperate circuits in their design, otherwise they would inevitably find the location of the needle in the haystack.

I wonder how few of these were sold.

I can vaguely make out the label, 20A per circuit circuit 1 is the 2 solid black wires and circuit 2 has the white stripes.

Perhaps for a catering service?
 

Old tool guy

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Apr 13, 2023
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So you couldn’t plug something else into the other outlet? For more pullout resistance so the plug didn’t fall out of the receptacle due to the weight of the cord? So you could advertise it on QVC and look! Gets power from both sides of the outlet!
 
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dave*99

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May 5, 2009
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Coastal NJ
Should work similar for kitchen split-receptacles too.
I agree. I wonder how many folks would know they have such a kitchen receptacle. My old house had a kitchen MWBC but every other duplex was on the same leg. No split duplexes.
 

CJ7VFR

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Jan 13, 2015
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Central New Jersey
I finally took some time to examine the labels. It’s definitely a generator cord, Briggs & Stratton label.
Yes, this cord came with a lot of the Briggs and Stratton Storm Responder portable generators that were sold years ago.

I have one of the Storm Responder portable generators that I purchased in 2011 after Hurricane Irene came thru NJ. It can output 5500 running watts and 8250 starting watts and it came with the exact extension cord that Hal has shown. Briggs and Stratton still make the Storm Responder portable generators but I don't know if they still come with this cord.

I never used the cord that came with mine as I also bought an L14-30 twistlock cord at the same time I bought the generator to connect the generator to the power inlet box on the house.

I couldn't use the cord inside anyway because I don't have any dual 20 amp receptacles anywhere in my house.

Jim
 

dscheidt

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Apr 26, 2017
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It's basic/standard around here on houses built from the 60's thru to about 2005.

didn't the Canadian code require it for a long time? I remember a canadian house guest being surprised he'd tripped a breaker when he plugged the toaster into the other outlet from the microwave, because he expected it to be a different circuit. I explained the NEC code, and wished they'd wired that apartment that way. (It had 2 20A circuits. One receptacle on one, rest on the other. All of the units w/ my floor plan were that way. Presumably, this saved the builder a couple dollars in wire.)
 

u2slow

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Nov 20, 2011
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BC
didn't the Canadian code require it for a long time?
Yes. It was the only way to do kitchen circuits. 20A non-splits finally became allowed around 2002-2005 as a reaction to increasing gfci requirements.
 

gtae07

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Mar 6, 2015
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Fayetteville, GA
I'd never heard of the split kitchen receptacles before. Now I'll know to look for that if we buy an older house.
 
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