240V disconnect with 120V lathe
On Jan 30, 3:31*pm, dpb wrote:
On 1/30/2012 9:44 AM, wrote:
On Jan 30, 10:43 am, wrote:
The only mistake I made in the original post is, I will attach the
equipment ground to the ground lugs on the disconnect box.
Yes, this is a box I have kicking around. * Lessons learned: do NOT
fuse neutral, fuses don't mitigate lightning.
My original problem was, the lathe does not have an on/off switch,
just a plug. * I dislike leaving it plugged in all the time because of
lightning, and I want a more convenient way to switch it on.
Thought this was the proper way to do it, except with a 120V
disconnect, which is harder to find. * Maybe this is just a waste of
effort like one of the posters said. * How about just wiring the
lathe on a residential 20A wall switch?
The motor is 2hp BTW.
It would be pretty likely a 2 hp motor would be dual-voltage.
2 hp @120V would possibly be drawing 22-25 A which is marginal at best
on 20 A circuit.
I'd suggest the better thing is to
a) Convert it to 240 V (halving the current draw), and
b) Add a switch to the device itself.
Whoa! You're intending to switch it with a disconnect?
We did that in the plant where I worked, long story, had to do with
zero energy state regulations. Big mistake. Disconnects are NOT
designed for that kind of service and they will fail, sometimes
spectacularly.
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