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This is a theoretical electrical question, not something I actually
plan to do. Say somebody wants to run a new circuit from the breaker box to one special outlet, like for a microwave oven or window air conditioner or something like that. Being an ecconomical sort, this guy decides that instead of buying the proper gauge wire for the job, he'll use up some 14 gauge wire which is lying around from a previous job, but run two hot lines and two ground lines in parallel, as diagrammed below. Box: Hot ==================== Load Outlet Box: Ground================== So we have two black 14g wires running from the hot connector on the breaker to the outlet and two white 14g wires running back from the outlet to the ground in the box. Two questions: 1. What gauge single wire would this be equivalent to in current carrying capacity? That is, would this be the same as running a single 10g or 8g or what? Maybe 14g / 2 = 7g? 2. This seems to be very unsafe but I'm not sure why. It's probably against every wiring code everywhere. What's the danger with this set up? Again, I'm not going to do this, I'm actually going to go out and buy the proper gauge wire for my project, but this popped into my head and I wondered what the rest of you thought about it. Paul |
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