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Default 220 volt wiring question

I just bought a Lincoln Square Wave Tig 175 Pro welder.

The wiring/fuse recomendations are 10 ga/100 amp.

I have a 200 amp home service and a 200 amp panel with two empty breaker slots and two unused 220 v circuits. The unused circuits each have double 30 amp breakers. My home electrical needs are modest so I don't see a max capacity problem.

1. Does a 220v circuit with a double 50 amp breaker = 100 amp circuit or do I need to find a double 100 amp breaker?

2. Do I have to give a modern welder its own box wired directly to a meter lug to prevent problems with sensitive electrical equipment in my home or can I get by with just adding it to my existing box.

3. If I need to separate it can I do so by connecting the feed wires to the same lugs used on the incoming side of my home panel. ie two wires connected to each lug above the main breaker and then feed to another small 100 amp panel with its own switch and breaker? Or are the lugs designed to secure only one wire.

Thanks

Doug
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Default 220 volt wiring question

I'm not an electrician, but have wired a home or few.

Kind of odd that it would want 10ga for 100amps. 10ga is only rated for
30amps. If your tig was going to pull 100 amps, I'm pretty sure that the
10ga wire would not support it.

I dont have my County Code book with me, but it went something like this:
An Electric Oven/Range needs a 6ga wire at 70amps for its needs
I think just the Electric Oven can get by on a #10 at 30amps, Same with an
AC
HiSpeed Electric Dryer needs a #8 @ 50 Amps.


For your Questions:
1) When you say A Dual , I think you just mean a 220v Breaker. Where the 2
breakers are switched with the one lever, So you would need a 'dual' 100.
The 'Dual' Allows the breaker to hit L1 and L2 of the Bus Bars. (Both Hots,
that's where the 220 comes from)
This is different from the Dual Lever, single form factor breaker. This
will allow two 120v connections in a single breaker slot (your panel has to
be keyed to accept it)
So you could get a Quad Dual, where the Inside and outside are switched
together across L1 & L2, so you could get two 220v circuits in 2 breaker
spaces.

2) You should be able to add it to the Existing panel on its own Circuit.
Addend a Separate panel would be unnecessary.

3) Lugs are typically used for the one. Is your house panel fed from a Main
panel elsewhere? Does the main Panel have more room for additional circuits?
My House has a Main Meter Panel with 42 Circuit capacity & the Meter Main. I
use it for all the 220v and for feeding the house Sub Panel and the Garage
Sub Panel. So it has two 100amp breakers feeding the Sub Panels, 50amp for
the Oven, 30amp for the Dryer and 30amp for the AC.

Hope that helps

Scott-


"dlgeis" wrote in message
...

I just bought a Lincoln Square Wave Tig 175 Pro welder.

The wiring/fuse recomendations are 10 ga/100 amp.

I have a 200 amp home service and a 200 amp panel with two empty
breaker slots and two unused 220 v circuits. The unused circuits each
have double 30 amp breakers. My home electrical needs are modest so I
don't see a max capacity problem.

1. Does a 220v circuit with a double 50 amp breaker = 100 amp circuit
or do I need to find a double 100 amp breaker?

2. Do I have to give a modern welder its own box wired directly to a
meter lug to prevent problems with sensitive electrical equipment in my
home or can I get by with just adding it to my existing box.

3. If I need to separate it can I do so by connecting the feed wires to
the same lugs used on the incoming side of my home panel. ie two wires
connected to each lug above the main breaker and then feed to another
small 100 amp panel with its own switch and breaker? Or are the lugs
designed to secure only one wire.

Thanks

Doug




--
dlgeis



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Default 220 volt wiring question

wrote:
On Wed, 26 Jul 2006 14:57:40 +0100, dlgeis
wrote:

I just bought a Lincoln Square Wave Tig 175 Pro welder.


I am jealous

The wiring/fuse recomendations are 10 ga/100 amp.


I looked at the Lincoln site

http://content.lincolnelectric.com//...r/im/IM565.pdf

Cool. I want one. :-)

... and that is certainly what it says if you have the 53 or 59 amp
input on the label.

1. Does a 220v circuit with a double 50 amp breaker = 100 amp circuit
or do I need to find a double 100 amp breaker?


double 100a and they should have it at Home Depot.



If you can't find a double 100A breaker, put a 60A or 70A in as a
temporary while you continue to look for a 100A.

Depending on how far the wire run is, I might use 6 gauge Aluminum SE
cable. That's probably cheaper than #10 copper right now, and it
wouldn't get as hot when operating at maximum current and maximum duty.
(assumes proper termination of the AL ends)

I think I used #8 copper to hook up my little welder, on a 50A circuit,
but copper was cheap back then.

Bob
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Default 220 volt wiring question

I assure you those welder ratings are always way off. A 30A double with
10ga wiring will be just fine. We ran our whole garage, (including a 250A
Hobart MIG) with a 10ga underground feeder. Never any light dimming or
voltage drop. I don't see where you got the 10ga/100A thing.

--
Steve Barker



"dlgeis" wrote in message
...

I just bought a Lincoln Square Wave Tig 175 Pro welder.

The wiring/fuse recomendations are 10 ga/100 amp.

I have a 200 amp home service and a 200 amp panel with two empty
breaker slots and two unused 220 v circuits. The unused circuits each
have double 30 amp breakers. My home electrical needs are modest so I
don't see a max capacity problem.

1. Does a 220v circuit with a double 50 amp breaker = 100 amp circuit
or do I need to find a double 100 amp breaker?

2. Do I have to give a modern welder its own box wired directly to a
meter lug to prevent problems with sensitive electrical equipment in my
home or can I get by with just adding it to my existing box.

3. If I need to separate it can I do so by connecting the feed wires to
the same lugs used on the incoming side of my home panel. ie two wires
connected to each lug above the main breaker and then feed to another
small 100 amp panel with its own switch and breaker? Or are the lugs
designed to secure only one wire.

Thanks

Doug




--
dlgeis



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Default 220 volt wiring question

According to Steve Barker LT :
I assure you those welder ratings are always way off. A 30A double with
10ga wiring will be just fine. We ran our whole garage, (including a 250A
Hobart MIG) with a 10ga underground feeder. Never any light dimming or
voltage drop. I don't see where you got the 10ga/100A thing.


He's probably confusing the output current of the welder with the
input current. Welders contain transformers that convert high voltage
low current to lower voltage and higher current.

Assuming 10ga was the recommended circuit wire size, the input
amps are around 25-30A.

A 100A circuit is going to need 4ga copper or 2-3 ga Al. That's
some huge welder.
--
Chris Lewis, Una confibula non set est
It's not just anyone who gets a Starship Cruiser class named after them.


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Default 220 volt wiring question

Chris Lewis wrote:
According to Steve Barker LT :
I assure you those welder ratings are always way off. A 30A double with
10ga wiring will be just fine. We ran our whole garage, (including a 250A
Hobart MIG) with a 10ga underground feeder. Never any light dimming or
voltage drop. I don't see where you got the 10ga/100A thing.


He's probably confusing the output current of the welder with the
input current. Welders contain transformers that convert high voltage
low current to lower voltage and higher current.

Assuming 10ga was the recommended circuit wire size, the input
amps are around 25-30A.

A 100A circuit is going to need 4ga copper or 2-3 ga Al. That's
some huge welder.



It is a big welder, but welders have special allowances in the NEC that
take into account the duty cycle. They also are not very succeptable to
voltage drop in the supply lines. Read section 630 (I think that's the
right section) and be very surprised.

Best regards,
Bob
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Default 220 volt wiring question

I'm glad you came along with the right answer. It's disgusting
how many people will offer advice when they're really guessing
and have no idea what a particular piece of equipment requires.
If only people would RTFM and only answer when they really
know what theyr'e talking about. Guessing is so useless.

Pop`


In ,
typed:
On Wed, 26 Jul 2006 14:57:40 +0100, dlgeis
wrote:


I just bought a Lincoln Square Wave Tig 175 Pro welder.


I am jealous


The wiring/fuse recomendations are 10 ga/100 amp.


I looked at the Lincoln site

http://content.lincolnelectric.com//...r/im/IM565.pdf

... and that is certainly what it says if you have the 53 or 59
amp
input on the label.

1. Does a 220v circuit with a double 50 amp breaker = 100 amp
circuit or do I need to find a double 100 amp breaker?


double 100a and they should have it at Home Depot.

2. Do I have to give a modern welder its own box wired
directly to a
meter lug to prevent problems with sensitive electrical
equipment
in my home or can I get by with just adding it to my existing
box.


add it into your panel in the available slots, you shouldn't
have a
problem. "Electronics" are not that sensitive to line noise.
You may
get some from the arcing through the air but that is not on the
input
side.

Welders are a different breed of cat so a lot of what people
"know"
about wiring does not apply here. You base the wiring on the
duty
cycle (25% in your case) and you can size the breaker to 200%
of the
input amps. So if we start with 59 amps from the label, you can
use up
to a 118 amp breaker, Lincoln says use 100. Take their
recomendation.
The wire size is determined by duty cycle using table 630.11(A)
if you
don't have the info on your label. You fall between 20 and 30a
so the
multiplier is between 0.45 and 0.55, call it 50%. Half of your
input
amps (59) is a tad less than 30 and that puts you in 10 guage
wire.
Clear as mud huh? That is why Lincoln gives you the label.

Have fun





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Default 220 volt wiring question

According to :
A 100A circuit is going to need 4ga copper or 2-3 ga Al. That's
some huge welder.


You really need to read NEC 630 before you say this.


Yeah, I guess so. Last I looked, CEC didn't have anything on it
like this.
--
Chris Lewis, Una confibula non set est
It's not just anyone who gets a Starship Cruiser class named after them.
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Default 220 volt wiring question

According to :
On Thu, 27 Jul 2006 17:05:43 -0000, (Chris
Lewis) wrote:

According to :
A 100A circuit is going to need 4ga copper or 2-3 ga Al. That's
some huge welder.


You really need to read NEC 630 before you say this.


Yeah, I guess so. Last I looked, CEC didn't have anything on it
like this.


I think I would try a smaller breaker if had it. I have been running
my "buzz box" on a 30a breaker for 3 decades and it calls for a 50.


I think it's _very_ common that (non-pro) people with welders that
call for 50A breakers are running them off 30A dryer receptacles.

A friend (professionally trained welder who now only does hobby stuff)
said that at the highest setting he'd ever use, he gets about 18"
of bead before the 30A breaker trips. So, he simply does 12" and lets
it cool off a bit before continuing. More relaxing that way anyway
he says.

My "efforts" (hah!) at stick welding stop at about 4" ;-)

I perhaps wouldn't have been quite so confused if he hadn't said 100A -
it sounded more like the output current of a small welder. Rather than
the input current of a welder rather larger than a hobbyist would
be likely to try using. Whereas it was more or less an ordinary 50A
one.

If you are going to have to buy a breaker you might as well get the
one they call for. I agree NEC 680 is one of the stranger articles,
particularly for people who have 240.4(D) burned in their mind. That
is where our familiar amps per wire size rules come from. It is the
"belt and suspenders" safety factor rule. You can't go wrong with
14=15a, 12=20a and 10=30a but it is probably more than you need for
dedicated motor, welder or HVAC loads


I'm quite familiar with the CEC rules for motors which are similar (but
not quite as drastic), and by extension am aware of the NEC ones (eg:
work with the electrical FAQ). I don't think my copy of the CEC has
anything for welders. But my copy is, after all, about 15 years old.
--
Chris Lewis, Una confibula non set est
It's not just anyone who gets a Starship Cruiser class named after them.
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Default 220 volt wiring question

I have been running this welder on a 50 amp breaker for at least 3
years. Never thrown a breaker. Welding aluminum I have duty cycled
out[welder quits, light comes on]

I personally would run it on the 50 amp with wire to match, unless you
need a long run of wire;nix that, a long run would give your voltage drop.

Wait, I'm lying, I just looked, it is a run of 10-3 sjo....extension
cord from the welding supply is 8 ga. Obviously it works...

BTW home centers usually quit at 60 amp breakers, and they start getting
pricey, unless it has changed. haven't look for a bit





wrote:
On Thu, 27 Jul 2006 19:48:20 -0000,
(Chris
Lewis) wrote:


I perhaps wouldn't have been quite so confused if he hadn't said 100A -
it sounded more like the output current of a small welder



I agree. It had me scratching my head and I looked up the PDF on the
Lincoln site. Sure enough that is what it says, along with "per the
NEC" so I looked up the welder rules in 630.
Until I ran the numbers I had a hard time getting my head around it
too but that is what it says..



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