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Andy[_35_] June 6th 17 11:17 PM

Gauge for 100 ft. extension cord
 
I have an air compressor that uses 13.5 amps.

What gauge would I need for a 100 ft. extension cord ?

Thanks,
Andy

[email protected] June 6th 17 11:35 PM

Gauge for 100 ft. extension cord
 
On Tue, 6 Jun 2017 15:17:10 -0700 (PDT), Andy
wrote:

I have an air compressor that uses 13.5 amps.
What gauge would I need for a 100 ft. extension cord ?
Thanks,
Andy




.... depends on the voltage.
John T.


mike[_22_] June 7th 17 12:57 AM

Gauge for 100 ft. extension cord
 
On 6/6/2017 3:17 PM, Andy wrote:
I have an air compressor that uses 13.5 amps.

What gauge would I need for a 100 ft. extension cord ?

Thanks,
Andy

https://www.google.com/webhp?tbs=li:...ion+cord+gauge

Stormin' Norman June 7th 17 01:11 AM

Gauge for 100 ft. extension cord
 
On Tue, 6 Jun 2017 15:17:10 -0700 (PDT), Andy
wrote:

I have an air compressor that uses 13.5 amps.

What gauge would I need for a 100 ft. extension cord ?

Thanks,
Andy


If the compressor operates on 110-120 volts AC. you could get away
with a 12 ga. x 100ft. extension cord. However, if it were me, I
would bite the bullet and get a 10 ga. cord, that way I would not be
concerned about the initial starting current draw of the motor AND I
would have a little excess capacity just in case I want to use a
second and third tool at the work site. For example, if you are spray
painting, you might want to use a 1/2 hp drill to mix a 5 gallon
bucket of paint while the compressor is running.

[email protected] June 7th 17 02:58 AM

Gauge for 100 ft. extension cord
 
On Tue, 06 Jun 2017 18:35:01 -0400, wrote:

On Tue, 6 Jun 2017 15:17:10 -0700 (PDT), Andy
wrote:

I have an air compressor that uses 13.5 amps.
What gauge would I need for a 100 ft. extension cord ?
Thanks,
Andy




... depends on the voltage.
John T.

Nothing smaller than a 12, for sure.

Ralph Mowery June 7th 17 03:00 AM

Gauge for 100 ft. extension cord
 
In article ,
says...

On Tue, 6 Jun 2017 15:17:10 -0700 (PDT), Andy
wrote:

I have an air compressor that uses 13.5 amps.
What gauge would I need for a 100 ft. extension cord ?
Thanks,
Andy




... depends on the voltage.
John T.


The voltage does not matter. It is all the current and distance.


Ralph Mowery June 7th 17 03:04 AM

Gauge for 100 ft. extension cord
 
In article ,
says...

I have an air compressor that uses 13.5 amps.

What gauge would I need for a 100 ft. extension cord ?

Thanks,
Andy


You need atleast 10 gauge. Even at that, there is one more thing to
look into. How far from the main breaker box to where you are going to
plug the cord into ?

The air compressor is probably going to need more than the 13 amps to
start up. That may or may not be a problem.


[email protected] June 7th 17 03:37 AM

Gauge for 100 ft. extension cord
 
The reply from "Hub" that the voltage did not matter is wrong. If you had a supply voltage of 24 Volts, and a 10 Volt drop in the power cord, that would be pretty much a loser. The same 10 Volt drop at 120 Volts would not be an issue under reasonable circumstances.

Ralph Mowery June 7th 17 03:55 AM

Gauge for 100 ft. extension cord
 
In article ,
says...

The reply from "Hub" that the voltage did not matter is wrong. If you had a supply voltage of 24 Volts, and a 10 Volt drop in the power cord, that would be pretty much a loser. The same 10 Volt drop at 120 Volts would not be an issue under reasonable circumstances.


You do not size it for a number of volts drop, you size it for a
percentage of the stating voltage drop. That is why you only need to
know the amps and distance.


mike[_22_] June 7th 17 05:15 AM

Gauge for 100 ft. extension cord
 
On 6/6/2017 7:55 PM, Ralph Mowery wrote:
In article ,
says...

The reply from "Hub" that the voltage did not matter is wrong. If you had a supply voltage of 24 Volts, and a 10 Volt drop in the power cord, that would be pretty much a loser. The same 10 Volt drop at 120 Volts would not be an issue under reasonable circumstances.


You do not size it for a number of volts drop, you size it for a
percentage of the stating voltage drop. That is why you only need to
know the amps and distance.

A percentage of a voltage that you don't care to know?
Maybe I just don't know how to determine the stating voltage?


trader_4 June 7th 17 06:35 AM

Gauge for 100 ft. extension cord
 
On Tuesday, June 6, 2017 at 10:37:08 PM UTC-4, wrote:
The reply from "Hub" that the voltage did not matter is wrong. If you had a supply voltage of 24 Volts, and a 10 Volt drop in the power cord, that would be pretty much a loser. The same 10 Volt drop at 120 Volts would not be an issue under reasonable circumstances.


Agree, the effect you describe is correct. From a practical standpoint, he's likely talking about 120v and I'd go with 10g. I've seen plenty of motors struggle, overheat, trip breakers on smaller cords, while they run fine on a heavy one.

Terry Coombs[_2_] June 7th 17 01:12 PM

Gauge for 100 ft. extension cord
 
On 6/6/2017 5:17 PM, Andy wrote:
I have an air compressor that uses 13.5 amps.

What gauge would I need for a 100 ft. extension cord ?

Thanks,
Andy


A hundred feet of air hose is probably cheaper than a heavy gauge
cord that long ... just sayin' . Put a portable receiver tank on a tee
near where you're working to help with surge usage .

--

Snag


[email protected] June 7th 17 02:36 PM

Gauge for 100 ft. extension cord
 
On Tue, 6 Jun 2017 22:55:44 -0400, Ralph Mowery
wrote:

In article ,
says...

The reply from "Hub" that the voltage did not matter is wrong. If you had a supply voltage of 24 Volts, and a 10 Volt drop in the power cord, that would be pretty much a loser. The same 10 Volt drop at 120 Volts would not be an issue under reasonable circumstances.


You do not size it for a number of volts drop, you size it for a
percentage of the stating voltage drop. That is why you only need to
know the amps and distance.

But 1 5% drop on a 24 volt line would require a much heavier cord
than a 5% drop on a 240 volt line. - so yes, voltage matters a bit.
However, the aitr compressor is going to be either 120 or 240, so the
difference is significantly smaller.

Colonel Edmund J. Burke[_19_] June 7th 17 03:01 PM

ANDY WANTS TO KNOW ABOUT "Gauge for 100 ft. extension cord"
 
On 6/6/2017 3:17 PM, Andy wrote:
I have an air compressor that uses 13.5 amps.

What gauge would I need for a 100 ft. extension cord ?

Thanks,
Andy



Twelve inches should do it.


Checkmate, DoW #1[_2_] June 7th 17 04:02 PM

ANDY WANTS TO KNOW ABOUT "Gauge for 100 ft. extension cord"
 
Warning! Always wear ANSI approved safety goggles when reading posts by
Checkmate! In article , burkesgurlz@std-
girls.com says...



On 6/6/2017 3:17 PM, Andy wrote:
I have an air compressor that uses 13.5 amps.

What gauge would I need for a 100 ft. extension cord ?

Thanks,
Andy



Twelve inches should do it.


ITYM 10 gauge, Kernel.

--
Another hand-crafted post from...
Checkmate
Usenet author, poet, comedian, and philosopher.
Copyright © 2017
all rights reserved

Please visit me at alt.checkmate, the new
go-to group for the discerning troll...

In loving memory of The Battle Kitten
May 2010-February 12, 2017

Colonel Edmund J. Burke[_19_] June 7th 17 05:46 PM

ANDY WANTS TO KNOW ABOUT "Gauge for 100 ft. extension cord"
 
On 6/7/2017 8:07 AM, Jack G wrote:
On Wednesday, June 7, 2017 at 7:01:20 AM UTC-7, Colonel Edmund J. Burke wrote:
On 6/6/2017 3:17 PM, Andy wrote:
I have an air compressor that uses 13.5 amps.

What gauge would I need for a 100 ft. extension cord ?

Thanks,
Andy



Twelve inches should do it.


Why do you keep posting stories from alt.home.repair that are off topic?


It's the handyman in me, Jack.

Stagger Lee[_3_] June 8th 17 08:13 PM

ANDY WANTS TO KNOW ABOUT "Gauge for 100 ft. extension cord"
 
On 6/7/2017 11:07 AM, Snohomo Jackie G wrote:
On Wednesday, June 7, 2017 at 7:01:20 AM UTC-7, Colonel Edmund J. Burke wrote:
On 6/6/2017 3:17 PM, Andy wrote:
I have an air compressor that uses 13.5 amps.

What gauge would I need for a 100 ft. extension cord ?

Thanks,
Andy


Twelve inches should do it.


Why do you keep posting stories from alt.home.repair that are off topic?




Why do you keep slurping little Eddie Burke..Snohomo Jackie?!?!


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