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[Amps] Source for 220V cords

To: <amps@contesting.com>
Subject: [Amps] Source for 220V cords
From: garyschafer@attbi.com (Gary Schafer)
Date: Thu, 07 Mar 2002 17:09:49 -0500
A window air conditioner cord is what you want. They have a molded plug on them,
although they are not usually all that long. Can be found in Home Depot, Lows or
probably most larger hardware stores.

By the way I think that a 15 amp 220 plug has one blade turned 90 degrees and
the 20 amp plug has both blades 90 degrees from what a standard 120 volt plug
would be.
These are all 3 wire plugs. 2 hot and ground. No neutral connection. I think
that the SB220 will run without the neutral on 220 vac.

You can find matching receptacles also. A single 220 receptacle will fit in
place of a dual 120 receptacle in the wall box. If I remember right, the 20 amp
receptacle has one side with a 2 way slot so it will accept a 15 or 20 amp plug.

I know that the 30 amp plugs get into the twist lock type. They may also make a
20 amp twist lock.

If your amp needs a neutral wire when operated on 220V then you need to go to a
4 wire 20 or 30 amp plug. These are all twist lock type and get rather
expensive. I just looked the other day. Receptacle is about $15.00 to $20.00 and
the plugs are $12.00 to $18.00
These by the way will fit in a standard outlet wall box.

Most of the larger stuff like the dryer and stove outlets are surface mount.

All this is US type. Other countries I am sure are quite different.

By the way I once ran my SB200 on 220 volts and used the same power cord and
just twisted one of the prongs 90 degrees so it would fit the 220 socket. I have
since rewired it back to 120 and twisted the prong back for 120 volts. It is
still fine after 30 some years!

73
Gary  K4FMX


Steve Katz wrote:

> The reason most 220V appliances including amplifiers sold in the U.S. do not
> come with an attached plug is that there is no standard for these plugs and
> their mating outlets.  A "dryer plug" is normally a huge 30A+ plug with
> three enormous pins and is way overkill for an amateur amplifier.  The
> standard NEMA 220V 15A plug & receptacle look like an ordinary 15A 120V plug
> & receptacle except one of the flat pins is turned 90 degrees.  However, the
> 20A+ NEMA 220V plugs & receptacles are mostly twistlock type.  Then, there
> are the European, Australian and other standards which are different from
> ours in the U.S.
>
> I would think a "dryer cord" with an attached plug would be horrendously
> expensive compared to simply buying the plug you need to mate with your
> outlet and screwing it on.
>
> WB2WIK/6
>
> "Each success only buys an admission ticket to a more difficult problem." --
> Henry Kissinger
>
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: RMead100@aol.com [SMTP:RMead100@aol.com]
> > Sent: Thursday, March 07, 2002 11:45 AM
> > To:   amps@contesting.com
> > Subject:      [Amps] Source for 220V cords
> >
> >
> > Hello to group
> >
> > How's this for a mundane question?
> >
> > Anyone have any suggestions for best source for a 220 volt cord for an SB
> > 220
> > with a plug already wired on it. I know I could buy a wire and plug and
> > wire
> > my own, but there must be an easy source where I could find one with the
> > plug
> > attached..
> >
> > Should I just look at a washing machine or clothes dryer supply place??
> >
> > Thanks
> >
> > Randy
> > K8BUX
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