DIYbanter

DIYbanter (https://www.diybanter.com/)
-   Home Repair (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/)
-   -   240 Wall Oven (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/199640-240-wall-oven.html)

Woody2 via HomeKB.com May 3rd 07 01:27 PM

240 Wall Oven
 
I just got a electric double wall oven to replace a gas one. I'm told that it
draws 30 amps by GE
I have a roll of 10/3 wire copper is this suitable. I need to run about 50ft
to the panel and have a spare 30 in the panel. The unit says 120/240v --
120/208v the pigtail on the unit is bx white red black and ground and says
600v -- Confused !
Thanks for any insight

Woody

--
Message posted via HomeKB.com
http://www.homekb.com/Uwe/Forums.aspx/repair/200705/1


Toller May 3rd 07 03:11 PM

240 Wall Oven
 

"Woody2 via HomeKB.com" u30143@uwe wrote in message
news:719f892e16683@uwe...
I just got a electric double wall oven to replace a gas one. I'm told that
it
draws 30 amps by GE
I have a roll of 10/3 wire copper is this suitable. I need to run about
50ft
to the panel and have a spare 30 in the panel. The unit says 120/240v --
120/208v the pigtail on the unit is bx white red black and ground and says
600v -- Confused !
Thanks for any insight

Woody

I hope you won't take this the wrong way...
The wire is exactly what you want, but if you have to ask this question I
sure wouldn't want you putting a circuit in my house.
Is the breaker a 240v?



Woody2 via HomeKB.com May 3rd 07 06:03 PM

240 Wall Oven
 
hello Toller
Yes its a 240v breaker, my reason for asking as 2 different so called
electricians have told me differant things . One said 10/3 and the other said
12

Toller wrote:
I just got a electric double wall oven to replace a gas one. I'm told that
it

[quoted text clipped - 7 lines]

Woody


I hope you won't take this the wrong way...
The wire is exactly what you want, but if you have to ask this question I
sure wouldn't want you putting a circuit in my house.
Is the breaker a 240v?


--
Message posted via HomeKB.com
http://www.homekb.com/Uwe/Forums.aspx/repair/200705/1


Mark Lloyd May 3rd 07 06:06 PM

240 Wall Oven
 
On Thu, 03 May 2007 12:27:05 GMT, "Woody2 via HomeKB.com" u30143@uwe
wrote:

I just got a electric double wall oven to replace a gas one. I'm told that it
draws 30 amps by GE
I have a roll of 10/3 wire copper is this suitable. I need to run about 50ft
to the panel and have a spare 30 in the panel. The unit says 120/240v --
120/208v the pigtail on the unit is bx white red black and ground and says
600v -- Confused !
Thanks for any insight

Woody


The 600v in the insulation rating on the wires. This is normal. You
DON'T use it with 600V. The other numbers are what voltages the oven
will actually work on.
--
Mark Lloyd
http://notstupid.laughingsquid.com

"Unlike biological evolution. 'intelligent design' is
not a genuine scientific theory and, therefore, has
no place in the curriculum of our nation's public
school classes." -- Ted Kennedy

[email protected] May 3rd 07 06:43 PM

240 Wall Oven
 
On May 3, 12:03 pm, "Woody2 via HomeKB.com" u30143@uwe wrote:
hello Toller
Yes its a 240v breaker, my reason for asking as 2 different so called
electricians have told me differant things . One said 10/3 and the other said
12

Toller wrote:
I just got a electric double wall oven to replace a gas one. I'm told that
it

[quoted text clipped - 7 lines]


Woody


I hope you won't take this the wrong way...
The wire is exactly what you want, but if you have to ask this question I
sure wouldn't want you putting a circuit in my house.
Is the breaker a 240v?


--
Message posted via HomeKB.comhttp://www.homekb.com/Uwe/Forums.aspx/repair/200705/1



Now, he's got me worried too. He has a roll of 10 gauge but is
worried if he should use 12 instead as suggested by an electrician?


Edwin Pawlowski May 3rd 07 07:03 PM

240 Wall Oven
 

"Woody2 via HomeKB.com" u30143@uwe wrote in message
news:719f892e16683@uwe...
I just got a electric double wall oven to replace a gas one. I'm told that
it
draws 30 amps by GE
I have a roll of 10/3 wire copper is this suitable. I need to run about
50ft
to the panel and have a spare 30 in the panel. The unit says 120/240v --
120/208v the pigtail on the unit is bx white red black and ground and says
600v -- Confused !
Thanks for any insight

Woody


If the unit draws 30 amps, you need a wire and breaker to handle at least 40
amp. Code is an 85% load actual on a circuit. That 30A breaker will pop
all the time. Sounds like you need to run 8GA and a 40A breaker.



Edwin Pawlowski May 3rd 07 07:05 PM

240 Wall Oven
 

wrote in message

Now, he's got me worried too. He has a roll of 10 gauge but is
worried if he should use 12 instead as suggested by an electrician?


But he said it "draws" 30A. That needs to be clarified also as opposed to
needing a 30A breaker. I think he needs professional help and not from the
one electrician.



Doug Miller May 3rd 07 07:49 PM

240 Wall Oven
 
In article Ctp_h.6154$YW4.5186@trndny06, "Edwin Pawlowski" wrote:

If the unit draws 30 amps, you need a wire and breaker to handle at least 40
amp. Code is an 85% load actual on a circuit. That 30A breaker will pop
all the time. Sounds like you need to run 8GA and a 40A breaker.


Actually, it's 80%, and that applies only to continuous loads (which is
defined as maximum current for 3 hours or more).

But I agree that if the oven actually draws 30A, it should be on a 40A circuit
with 8gauge wire.

To the OP: If the oven says it needs a 30A circuit, then the 10gauge wire and
30A breaker you have are fine. "Needs a 30A circuit" and "draws 30A" are not
the same. If you don't understand the difference, you should not be attempting
to do this yourself.

Oh, and the guy who said you could use 12gauge wire? He's dead wrong. Don't
let him anywhere near your wiring. And don't take his advice, either, without
checking it out first with someone who actually knows about this stuff -- he
doesn't.

--
Regards,
Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com)

It's time to throw all their damned tea in the harbor again.

EXT May 3rd 07 09:02 PM

240 Wall Oven
 
Don't go by what someone told you as to the amps drawn. Personally I have
never heard of a double oven that only drew 30 amps, a single oven - yes.
The one I had needed a 50 amp breaker.

Read the manufacturer's name plate where it gives the model, serial number
and power requirements. That is the number you believe.

"Woody2 via HomeKB.com" u30143@uwe wrote in message
news:719f892e16683@uwe...
I just got a electric double wall oven to replace a gas one. I'm told that
it
draws 30 amps by GE
I have a roll of 10/3 wire copper is this suitable. I need to run about
50ft
to the panel and have a spare 30 in the panel. The unit says 120/240v --
120/208v the pigtail on the unit is bx white red black and ground and says
600v -- Confused !
Thanks for any insight

Woody

--
Message posted via HomeKB.com
http://www.homekb.com/Uwe/Forums.aspx/repair/200705/1




sym May 4th 07 01:45 AM

240 Wall Oven
 
On May 3, 8:27 am, "Woody2 via HomeKB.com" u30143@uwe wrote:
I just got a electric double wall oven to replace a gas one. I'm told that it
draws 30 amps by GE
I have a roll of 10/3 wire copper is this suitable. I need to run about 50ft
to the panel and have a spare 30 in the panel. The unit says 120/240v --
120/208v the pigtail on the unit is bx white red black and ground and says
600v -- Confused !
Thanks for any insight

Woody

--
Message posted via HomeKB.comhttp://www.homekb.com/Uwe/Forums.aspx/repair/200705/1


check the plate or the electrical requirements that came with the
unit. the last few double ovens i hooked up required 40 amp circuit ,
not to say yours isnt a 30 amp requirment.



All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:02 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter