Re: Electrical problems in woodworking
Posted: Tue Dec 08, 2020 8:34 pm
More breakers and panels don't necessarily add more load on the main breaker. The loads drawing power are what trips breakers when you exceed their capability.
If you run your Shopsmith on a 20 amp circuit shared with another simlar motor, you trip the breaker. If you run them on separate 20 amp lines, they each run without problems. And, if you look at the formula for electric power, P=IE, it tells you that if you load a circuit to near capacity, a voltage drop will in turn cause a rise in current to maintain the needed power level. As current is what trips the breaker, loading circuits trips breakers while adding more circuits makes things run cooler and more safely.
My total power consumption runs around 750-1000kw per month. That means I'm using an average of under 1 1/4kw per hour. The only devices in my house running on 240v are my kitchen range and my clothes dryer. Together they take around 60amps, but seldom run at the same time. That 60 amps plus my 120v stuff would rarely reach 75 amps which doesn't put any stress on my 150 amp breaker. More breakers don't cause problems. Too few breakers and lines is the problem.
If you run your Shopsmith on a 20 amp circuit shared with another simlar motor, you trip the breaker. If you run them on separate 20 amp lines, they each run without problems. And, if you look at the formula for electric power, P=IE, it tells you that if you load a circuit to near capacity, a voltage drop will in turn cause a rise in current to maintain the needed power level. As current is what trips the breaker, loading circuits trips breakers while adding more circuits makes things run cooler and more safely.
My total power consumption runs around 750-1000kw per month. That means I'm using an average of under 1 1/4kw per hour. The only devices in my house running on 240v are my kitchen range and my clothes dryer. Together they take around 60amps, but seldom run at the same time. That 60 amps plus my 120v stuff would rarely reach 75 amps which doesn't put any stress on my 150 amp breaker. More breakers don't cause problems. Too few breakers and lines is the problem.