CJseven
Well-known member
I’m going to be wiring my lights this weekend in my shop, I have 4 400 watt metal hylide high bays that I’m planning on hooking up 2 per circuit with 2 three way switches. Will 14-2 handle this?
904 watts divided by 120 volts = 7.53 amps per circuit
I’m going to be wiring my lights this weekend in my shop, I have 4 400 watt metal hylide high bays that I’m planning on hooking up 2 per circuit with 2 three way switches. Will 14-2 handle this?
There's a ballast, and depending on what kind it is, it will draw anywhere from 45 to 65 watts.904 watts? How did you get that?
Jim
Regardless, you should run 12g wiring. It cost a bit more but good in the long run. None of my wiring is 14g.
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A 400 watt metal halide fixture is 4 amperes at 120V for each fixture.
400W is the output rating of the fixture, not the current consumption. Total consumed current is higher. You have to look at the manufacturer's specs for the ballast and add the current usage to the bulb usage.
Tommy
Why do you feel it is beneficial to oversize wires in lighting circuits?
The more we go LED the more overkill the wall wiring gets LOL. I just put up 12 stands of "C9" LED red on the house and shop. Plugged into a 20A GFCI wired with 12. Total string draw is 27w. The landscape light draw total is 22w.
Regardless of wire gage, you are also going to need some 3 conductor cable to make 3 way switches work.
I like #14 for lighting circuits. It's easier to work with and making connections is faster. Sometimes you have to run more circuits vs. a #12 but lighting is a fixed load and easy to plan for.




Do yourself a favour. Throw those power hog POS metal halides in the trash were they belong, I wouldn't install them even if someone paid me.
Do yourself a favour. Throw those power hog POS metal halides in the trash were they belong, I wouldn't install them even if someone paid me.
I'm curious. How have you come to this conclusion? Considering that metal halide is actually a reasonably efficient lighting system, I find your statements a little suspect.
Everything and I mean every light in my shop/house is LED. Still ran 12/2 for the lights. Overkill? Probably but you only get one chance.
I thought the same thing.
Amp/Watt draw. I suspect that you can get the same amount of light from LEDs that will draw a lot less power.
That's something that annoys me to no end on here. Everybody is like "LED, LED, must get LED. It's so much better than ____".
But then they proceed to go buy and put up the cheapest, crappiest led fixtures they can find. Poor quality light, short lifespan and overall cheap build quality...But hey you got a led. Guys like Platonic Solid have way more patience than me and mange to guide quite a few people to decent lights.
I see nothing wrong with reusing some old fixtures if they fit the bill for your shop.
Everything and I mean every light in my shop/house is LED. Still ran 12/2 for the lights. Overkill? Probably but you only get one chance.
Not if it’s in conduit. Romex is garbage. Would never use that ****.
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Do yourself a favour. Throw those power hog POS metal halides in the trash were they belong, I wouldn't install them even if someone paid me.
That's something that annoys me to no end on here. Everybody is like "LED, LED, must get LED. It's so much better than ____".
But then they proceed to go buy and put up the cheapest, crappiest led fixtures they can find. Poor quality light, short lifespan and overall cheap build quality....
Has anyone mentioned the slow warm up to full brightness and the long time restrike in case of a power blip?
I like #14 for lighting circuits. It's easier to work with and making connections is faster. Sometimes you have to run more circuits vs. a #12 but lighting is a fixed load and easy to plan for.
Not if it’s in conduit. Romex is garbage. Would never use that ****.
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There's a ballast, and depending on what kind it is, it will draw anywhere from 45 to 65 watts.
CD
[ROMEX] I've got about 3k feet of it in my shop. Seems to carry the electricity just fine.