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echo: rberrypi
to: RICKMAN
from: MARTIN GREGORIE
date: 2017-04-06 12:36:00
subject: Re: ARMv8.1?

On Wed, 05 Apr 2017 22:33:00 -0400, rickman wrote:

> On 4/5/2017 8:43 PM, Martin Gregorie wrote:
>> On Wed, 05 Apr 2017 18:28:00 +1200, Bill McGarrity wrote:
>>
>>> -=> rickman wrote to All on 04-05-17 17:07 <=-
>>>
>>>  ri> That is another smart thing the UK does.  In the US circuits are
>>>  ri> typically 15 amps which can safely be carried over 16 gauge wire.
>>>  So ri> every device that plugs into an AC outlet uses 16 gauge wire
>>>  even if it ri> only draws less than an amp.
>>>
>>> US code for house wiring is 14 gauge for 15a circuits and 12 gauge for
>>> 20a service. Distance is also a factor in determining both wire gauge
>>> and service amps (600ft for 14/3 [15a] and 800ft for 12/3 [20a]).
>>>
>> One thing that really worried me when I was living there was the way
>> cables to the more energy-intensive appliances heated up during normal
>> use when laid out across a floor. That was something I wasn't used to
>> feeling.
>>
>> Of course, 110v has a lot to answer for there: in the UK a 3kw heater
>> or power tool draws 12.5A, just under the 13A limit for standard plugs,
>> but a 3kw appliance will draw 27.25A in the USA - and its amps, not
>> volts, that melts or burns insulation off a cable.
>
> In the US a 3 kW appliance will run on 240 volts.  We have 15 amp 120
> volt circuits normally and you can have a 20 amp 120 volt circuit with a
> slightly different socket which will also accept the 15 amp plugs, but
> they are not common.  If you need more than about 1.5 kW you use a 240
> volt outlet with currents starting at 15 amp I believe.

Fair comment, but I still remember those hot (above blood heat) cables on
vacuum cleaners and all the warnings about not leaving power cables
coiled up.


--
martin@   | Martin Gregorie
gregorie. | Essex, UK
org       |

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