i believe brick is suggesting you add a coulple of breakers to your box and run dedicated outlets to that closet. this way you dont trip a braker when you use a hairdryer or your alarm clock goes off.thanks for your help brick.. i honestly have no experience at all with anything electrical. how would i run new dedicated lines to the room? The walk in closet is attached to a master bath room with plenty of outlets and the master bedroom is also right next to the closet. could i run two separate lines or thick heavy duty extension chords, One to the bathroom outlets and one to the master bedroom outlet from two separate powerstrips in the closet?
Hey chunkeymunkey the configuration of that plug tells me your outlet is likely 230V (perhaps once used for a window A/C). If so replacing it with a standard 110V receptacle could result in serious damage to your equipment, or worse! See if the breaker that controls it is single-pole (110V) or double pole (230V). Better yet use a voltmeter testing straight blade to straight blade to verify it's voltage 100% before changing it out.Hey Brick and others with electrical knowledge. I first want to commend you for sharing your experience with us. Second, I have an outlet that is one that will fit a plug like the one pictured below. I am wondering if I can switch this to a regular outlet so that I can run an extention cord to my disgnated area since that outlet has it's own 20 amp circuit. Is there one outlet that would be better than another or one that I should stay away from? Can they handle that amperage? Also, is it as easy as unscrewing a couple of screws and putting the wires on the new one and tighten the screws? ( I know to shut down the circuit)
It is for a window a/c. How can I tell if it's single or double pole? I haven't taken the front panel off yet but I will. What do I look for? Or if I get a voltmeter, I just put one point in flat recepticle and the other in the other flat recepticle?Hey chunkeymunkey the configuration of that plug tells me your outlet is likely 230V (perhaps once used for a window A/C). If so replacing it with a standard 110V receptacle could result in serious damage to your equipment, or worse! See if the breaker that controls it is single-pole (110V) or double pole (230V). Better yet use a voltmeter testing straight blade to straight blade to verify it's voltage 100% before changing it out.
I only have 120V outlets and I use two 600W electronic ballasts @ 120V. Is there any benefit to using a 240V electronic ballasts vs a 120V?
-I see a response by bricktown I believe to these two questions-quick question .... will i benefit at all from having a 220/240 light ballast ?
If I understand what your saying, using Lumatek ballast as an example, a 600W 240V Lumatek ballast uses half the wattage of a 600W 120V Lumatek ballast?The benifit of running a 240 or 220 volt ballast is you use half the wattage.
That isn't what I was asking though.-I see a response by bricktown I believe to these two questions-
If I understand what your saying, using Lumatek ballast as an example, a 600W 240V Lumatek ballast uses half the wattage of a 600W 120V Lumatek ballast?
So then it must cost half as much to run a A 600W 240V Lumatek ballast vs 600W 120V Lumatek ballast even if their both 600W ballast right?
This is the question I had.Ok so I just took the face off of the air conditioner and it has a 230 volt to 208 volt range. So do I just buy a single pole breaker 15 amp and switch it and move the white wire to the neutral bar?
I know chunkymunkey, skoolzone and I asked those questions before you ever posted in this thread and the response seems to be in regard to our questions not yours.That isn't what I was asking though.
this may sound like a stupid question, but I was wondering if my exhaust fan should be stronger than my intake fan?
No either voltage ,same wattage is used,Only diff is amps,which means more lights can be run off circuit,smaller gage wire can be used.Some magnetic ballists will run a little cooler off 240 volts but will still use same amount of power.A 110 volt 1000 watt hps will use 1000 watts,a 240 volt 1000 watt hps will use 1000 watts too,You pay for watts not amps.The benifit of running a 240 or 220 volt ballast is you use half the wattage.