Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
RPC text, and sensible 3 phase shop wiring.
Ignoramus27279 wrote:
...what is the best way to wire my shop... First time, I went and scrounged up a bunch of receptacles and wired them all into my RPC box, planning to run cords with plugs. This works fine, but all those plugs and receptacles cost huge dough, and I found that most 3-phase machines don't move very often anyway, since many of mine weigh half a ton or more. So I just ran conduit around my shop, and ran a 3-phase bus (including neutral) around everywhere, and terminated in 6 locations in a 30A 3-phase disconnect box mounted on the wall. Now I just wire machines to the nearest disconnect box, using flex conduit, and size the breakers in each disconnect appropriately as best I can. I've wired two machines in at once which is easy to do although probably not up to code. My shop is strictly a one-machine-at-a-time shop so I don't worry about overloading the whole thing although there are about a zillion breakers in line. GWE |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
On Fri, 29 Jul 2005 20:38:40 -0700, Grant Erwin
wrote: Ignoramus27279 wrote: ...what is the best way to wire my shop... First time, I went and scrounged up a bunch of receptacles and wired them all into my RPC box, planning to run cords with plugs. This works fine, but all those plugs and receptacles cost huge dough, and I found that most 3-phase machines don't move very often anyway, since many of mine weigh half a ton or more. So I just ran conduit around my shop, and ran a 3-phase bus (including neutral) around everywhere, and terminated in 6 locations in a 30A 3-phase disconnect box mounted on the wall. Now I just wire machines to the nearest disconnect box, using flex conduit, and size the breakers in each disconnect appropriately as best I can. I've wired two machines in at once which is easy to do although probably not up to code. My shop is strictly a one-machine-at-a-time shop so I don't worry about overloading the whole thing although there are about a zillion breakers in line. GWE Thats roughly what I did as well, though I managed to scrounge up about 20 pairs of Hubble 30 amp 3ph male/female connectors from a buddy who runs a surplus electronic house, and the females hang from strain reliefs from the bottoms of sub panels scattered around the shop walls, each numbered to match the breaker in the sub. Each machine is plugged in and has about 20 feet of SOW cord tie wrapped behind each machine. I Do move mine occasionally, so this works pretty well for me. The very noisy commercial RPC is located 50 feet away under a shelter at the rear of the house, outside, and is turned off and on by one of four switches that control contactors housed in an old Hardinge lathe control panel, also located some distance away. I can turn on main power, RPC, air compressor (located outside also), master VFD and shop lighting from one central location. When the RPC and compressor were inside, I would be half mad and deaf from the noise after a few hours and they took up badly needed space. Gunner Liberals - Cosmopolitan critics, men who are the friends of every country save their own. Benjamin Disraeli |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
"Ignoramus27279" wrote:
I will visit the junkyard again on Monday morning to get some fuses and more disconnects and relays etc, for the future. Hey Iggy, if you are going to the Pioneer Industrial Services place, see if you can find an e-mail address for them other than the disfunctional one at northstarnet; I want to get a couple of contactors from them. If you remember, anyway. Thanks, Jon |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|