Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
Home Repair (alt.home.repair) For all homeowners and DIYers with many experienced tradesmen. Solve your toughest home fix-it problems. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#81
|
|||
|
|||
Blower on furnace hums and doesn't start
A simple "I stand corrected" would have sufficed ya ****ing whiner.
"REL" wrote in message ... On Fri, 28 Nov 2003 15:59:11 GMT, "volts500" wrote: Dude, If your dick is as short as your memory, I feel for your partner, I really do. You have a real ****ing problem not with electrical understanding but with being wrong. Your so ****ing narrow minded and self centered you want to argue about being wrong about being right and being told you were right. Get a ****ing clue you idiot and read the ****ing words again dumbass. You are correct, according to the NEC you are allowed to wire for the MCA and protect by the MOCP. For example MCA 30 you may use #10 wire MOCP of 40 you may use a 40 amp fuse or breaker. You also may use the 30 amp breaker as I stated by sizing it to the wire. There is NOTHING out of code by doing so as I stated as you are UNDER the MOCP. I said before and I will say again, I am hard headed and I said you were 100% right and I was 100% incorrect, it is legal for you to follow that minmum standard as outlined by the NEC, the authority on minimum standards. I also maintain I have no intention of following the minimum standards and will continue to maintain a higher level of safety to persons and property by NOT installing the smallest wire on the largest breaker. The increased cost compared to the increased liability for the client is small and often non-existant due to other electrical concerns. By sizing the breaker to meet the ampacity of the wire you maintain the same standard used for other electrical circuits within a dwelling. By wiring an AC unit as I have outlined, you will never have an inspector question what has been done. Wired as Volts500 has clearly stated is legal within the minumum standards, an inspector may well question it at which point you can point out the code sections that allow it and take great pleasure in pointing out the inspector is wrong, which Volts500 takes such great pleasure in doing. Now back to you Volts500, is there anything else I can do to get you to shut your ****ing pie hole about this one? You were right the first time, but you were wrong the second, it was already settled, at least as far as I was concerned. Do you need a wall plaque stating that REL was wrong and Volts500 was right or what? FYI, your refrences need more than typo work, read closely and you will see. the other rich PS. I can understand your frustration with some of the cross posting within alt.home.repair, however, other than a short stint harassing Tom, I certianly do not bother or help AHR. After it was cleared up that Tom was not on the pedophile listing for his state I have said less than ten words to him and have not bothered the AHR group at all. While I know you are about as hard headed as I am, you should let this one go, it was settled you were correct back in 04-2003, unless it was the only time you were ever correct in your life, continuing to bring it up only makes you look foolish. |
#82
|
|||
|
|||
Blower on furnace hums and doesn't start
A simple "I stand corrected" would have sufficed ya ****ing whiner.
"REL" wrote in message ... On Fri, 28 Nov 2003 15:59:11 GMT, "volts500" wrote: Dude, If your dick is as short as your memory, I feel for your partner, I really do. You have a real ****ing problem not with electrical understanding but with being wrong. Your so ****ing narrow minded and self centered you want to argue about being wrong about being right and being told you were right. Get a ****ing clue you idiot and read the ****ing words again dumbass. You are correct, according to the NEC you are allowed to wire for the MCA and protect by the MOCP. For example MCA 30 you may use #10 wire MOCP of 40 you may use a 40 amp fuse or breaker. You also may use the 30 amp breaker as I stated by sizing it to the wire. There is NOTHING out of code by doing so as I stated as you are UNDER the MOCP. I said before and I will say again, I am hard headed and I said you were 100% right and I was 100% incorrect, it is legal for you to follow that minmum standard as outlined by the NEC, the authority on minimum standards. I also maintain I have no intention of following the minimum standards and will continue to maintain a higher level of safety to persons and property by NOT installing the smallest wire on the largest breaker. The increased cost compared to the increased liability for the client is small and often non-existant due to other electrical concerns. By sizing the breaker to meet the ampacity of the wire you maintain the same standard used for other electrical circuits within a dwelling. By wiring an AC unit as I have outlined, you will never have an inspector question what has been done. Wired as Volts500 has clearly stated is legal within the minumum standards, an inspector may well question it at which point you can point out the code sections that allow it and take great pleasure in pointing out the inspector is wrong, which Volts500 takes such great pleasure in doing. Now back to you Volts500, is there anything else I can do to get you to shut your ****ing pie hole about this one? You were right the first time, but you were wrong the second, it was already settled, at least as far as I was concerned. Do you need a wall plaque stating that REL was wrong and Volts500 was right or what? FYI, your refrences need more than typo work, read closely and you will see. the other rich PS. I can understand your frustration with some of the cross posting within alt.home.repair, however, other than a short stint harassing Tom, I certianly do not bother or help AHR. After it was cleared up that Tom was not on the pedophile listing for his state I have said less than ten words to him and have not bothered the AHR group at all. While I know you are about as hard headed as I am, you should let this one go, it was settled you were correct back in 04-2003, unless it was the only time you were ever correct in your life, continuing to bring it up only makes you look foolish. |
#83
|
|||
|
|||
Blower on furnace hums and doesn't start
"REL" wrote in message ... On Fri, 28 Nov 2003 15:59:11 GMT, "volts500" wrote: Dude, If your dick is as short as your memory, I feel for your partner, I really do. You have a real ****ing problem not with electrical understanding but with being wrong. Your so ****ing narrow minded and self centered you want to argue about being wrong about being right and being told you were right. Get a ****ing clue you idiot and read the ****ing words again dumbass. You are correct, according to the NEC you are allowed to wire for the MCA and protect by the MOCP. For example MCA 30 you may use #10 wire MOCP of 40 you may use a 40 amp fuse or breaker. You also may use the 30 amp breaker as I stated by sizing it to the wire. There is NOTHING out of code by doing so as I stated as you are UNDER the MOCP. I said before and I will say again, I am hard headed and I said you were 100% right and I was 100% incorrect, it is legal for you to follow that minmum standard as outlined by the NEC, the authority on minimum standards. I also maintain I have no intention of following the minimum standards and will continue to maintain a higher level of safety to persons and property by NOT installing the smallest wire on the largest breaker. The increased cost compared to the increased liability for the client is small and often non-existant due to other electrical concerns. Relax - Volts500 being right only means that he spent all Thanksgiving weekend in his room thumbing through his NEC book (from what I see on various groups it's his one and only friend - his parents were probably greatfull for the break) to back up his facts and prove he was right in theory. However it is obvious in the real world you are correct in your stand that you will not just do the minimum standards and when he graduates High School (when he is 24 or 25) he will probably become a hack at whatever job he persues (besides the job he has now flipping burgers after school (this info obtained from various postings)). |
#84
|
|||
|
|||
Blower on furnace hums and doesn't start
"REL" wrote in message ... On Fri, 28 Nov 2003 15:59:11 GMT, "volts500" wrote: Dude, If your dick is as short as your memory, I feel for your partner, I really do. You have a real ****ing problem not with electrical understanding but with being wrong. Your so ****ing narrow minded and self centered you want to argue about being wrong about being right and being told you were right. Get a ****ing clue you idiot and read the ****ing words again dumbass. You are correct, according to the NEC you are allowed to wire for the MCA and protect by the MOCP. For example MCA 30 you may use #10 wire MOCP of 40 you may use a 40 amp fuse or breaker. You also may use the 30 amp breaker as I stated by sizing it to the wire. There is NOTHING out of code by doing so as I stated as you are UNDER the MOCP. I said before and I will say again, I am hard headed and I said you were 100% right and I was 100% incorrect, it is legal for you to follow that minmum standard as outlined by the NEC, the authority on minimum standards. I also maintain I have no intention of following the minimum standards and will continue to maintain a higher level of safety to persons and property by NOT installing the smallest wire on the largest breaker. The increased cost compared to the increased liability for the client is small and often non-existant due to other electrical concerns. Relax - Volts500 being right only means that he spent all Thanksgiving weekend in his room thumbing through his NEC book (from what I see on various groups it's his one and only friend - his parents were probably greatfull for the break) to back up his facts and prove he was right in theory. However it is obvious in the real world you are correct in your stand that you will not just do the minimum standards and when he graduates High School (when he is 24 or 25) he will probably become a hack at whatever job he persues (besides the job he has now flipping burgers after school (this info obtained from various postings)). |
#85
|
|||
|
|||
Blower on furnace hums and doesn't start
On Sun, 30 Nov 2003 00:00:05 GMT, "volts500"
wrote: A simple "I stand corrected" would have sufficed ya ****ing whiner. Aw ****! The way you went on and on about a settled issue, I figured you needed some more strokin of your ego so you could sport some tooth pick wood. Why don't you **** yourself in the corner instead, then the usenet communities would not have to watch you snivel. Is it all the illegals keeping wages down, or the snowbirds driving 20 in the 40 MPH zone that have your panties in a wad this time? Get a life, you got your ass kicked, it will happen again so shut the **** up and move on bitch. the other rich |
#86
|
|||
|
|||
Blower on furnace hums and doesn't start
On Sun, 30 Nov 2003 00:00:05 GMT, "volts500"
wrote: A simple "I stand corrected" would have sufficed ya ****ing whiner. Aw ****! The way you went on and on about a settled issue, I figured you needed some more strokin of your ego so you could sport some tooth pick wood. Why don't you **** yourself in the corner instead, then the usenet communities would not have to watch you snivel. Is it all the illegals keeping wages down, or the snowbirds driving 20 in the 40 MPH zone that have your panties in a wad this time? Get a life, you got your ass kicked, it will happen again so shut the **** up and move on bitch. the other rich |
#87
Posted to alt.home.repair,alt.hvac
|
|||
|
|||
Blower on furnace hums and doesn't start
replying to Henry77, Zeke57 wrote:
I have a 1993 model cmf power gas furnace, it can work fine flow days then the blower motor just hums, and doesnt start when I spit the fan, can anyone help me, please -- for full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/mainte...rt-488069-.htm |
#88
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
Blower on furnace hums and doesn't start
On Saturday, February 17, 2018 at 10:44:06 PM UTC-5, Zeke57 wrote:
replying to Henry77, Zeke57 wrote: I have a 1993 model cmf power gas furnace, it can work fine flow days then the blower motor just hums, and doesnt start when I spit the fan, can anyone help me, please -- for full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/mainte...rt-488069-.htm If it has a start /run cap, it could be bad. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|