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Load capacity of 200-amp panel
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SAm E
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Load capacity of 200-amp panel
On Sat, 24 Oct 2009 18:17:14 GMT,
(Doug Miller)
wrote:
In article ,
wrote:
Consider this simple circuit analogy which is exactly what you would
have with a balanced load on a 240V service. It's a 240V voltage
source powering two 120ohm resistors.
____________ 240V___________
I I
I I
I I
---------120ohm---------120ohm---------
a b c
There is only 1 amp of actual current flowing in the circuit. Across
each resistor there is 120Volts and 1 amp of current flowing. So,
yes you have 1 amp flowing in EACH load, it is supporting two 1 amp
loads, but it's the same physical current flowing through each load.
The "service" is only supplying 1 amp of actual current, not 2.
What voltage do you measure between a and b? Between c and b?
What current do you measure between a and b? Between c and b?
That's what I meant when I said a 200 amp service cannot supply 400
amps of current.
But it can. 200A at 120V on each leg is a total of 400A at 120V. The two legs
of a residential electrical service are, in effect, two parallel circuits.
200A flowing in each of two parallel circuits is 400A total, not 200A.
You have a SERIES circuit (considering that the neutral is effectively
disconnected).
[snip]
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