>Dryers and ranges are resistive loads (cept the dryer motor) and do not
>produce voice modulated current peaks that like to see very low mains
>resistance. Nice cheap upgrade for any amp.
It doesn't seem to me that putting a beefy cable between the receptacle and
the amp wouldn't help anything unless it's a 50 amp 240 v circuit to start
with. Is it?
Note also that these amps are spec'd for 20 amps 120 volts circuits. This is
no accident. A lot of these them are being plugged into residential wiring
circuits which aren't more than 20 amp 120 volt 12-3 wire runs to start
with, and I bet there even are a few that are plugged into 15 amp 14-3,
which is standard room wiring these days.
The fact is that the load rating of the amp is 10 amps and not 50 amps. A 6
gauge pigtail is simply irrelevant to an appliance fused at 10 amps and I
wouldn't bother with it.
73 Neal N7RX
_______________________________________________
Amps mailing list
Amps@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/amps
|