Oh boy! What did I do! I was just trying to make up an example of
dumb-ass electricians! At least this thread does relate to Classic Computer
Collecting...
--- David A Woyciesjes
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--- Yale University Press
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Mac OS X 10.1.2 - Darwin Kernel Version 5.2: Fri Dec 7 21:39:35 PST 2001
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From: r. 'bear' stricklin
On Tue, 12 Feb 2002, Tothwolf wrote:
You won't find a 16A breaker in a branch
circuit. You'd likely see a 15A
breaker (residential, probably 14Ga, maybe 12Ga wire), or a 20A breaker
(12Ga or 10Ga wire). A 15A circuit would not be safe at all, while a 20A
*might* be ok, but the system could still overload the receptacle and
plug
since they are still only rated for 15A.
Wait a minute, isn't the only physical difference between NEMA 5-15 (110V,
15A) and 5-20 (110V, 20A) that one pin is rotated 90 degrees? In this
case, since residential electrical code would mandate wiring capable of
delivering 20A service on a circuit protected by a 20A breaker, wouldn't
you say that the principle reason for NEMA 5-20 existing be to prevent
user error more than anything else?
ok
r.