Mike,
That was one of the reasons I used them plus they were cheaper than going and
buying a piece of SO cord and a plug. They make some smaller for large window
air conditioners running on 220 Vac too. However, I just went and looked at my
dryer cord and it couldn't be over 14 gage, maybe 12 at the most as it's only
about 1" wide if that. One of those same flat grey cables. It did use a 3/4"
conduit clamp instead of a 1/2" though. If I recall, most range cords are
smaller than a dryer cord, and the circuit doesn't require as large of a
breaker, I may be wrong. I imagine why the cords are as cheap as they are is
where their mass produced. You can find them cheaper at the surplus houses like
H&R. I bought mine at a supplier who specializes in HVAC, and appliance parts
named M&R Supply in Huntington, WV. Of course I had a discount there at the
time where I was a business. Lowes and Home Depot has them about as cheap.
On AM/SSB amps, it takes more as not only do you have those power peaks but you
have a carrier that has to be supported. Most amps are made for both so you
have to size everything around that usage unless you'll never operate it on AM.
Best,
Will
*********** REPLY SEPARATOR ***********
On 10/2/05 at 3:13 PM m.ford wrote:
>----- Original Message -----
>From: "Neal Sacon" <neal@sacon.net>
>To: <AMPS@contesting.com>
>Sent: Sunday, October 02, 2005 2:09 PM
>Subject: [Amps] Power cord to use when converting AL-80B to 240 volts?
>
>
>> You're probably thinking about range and dryer cords and plugs as
>examples
>> of "actual 240 v. power cord" but you really don't need range or dryer
>cord,
>> plugs or receptacles for your application - you're not pulling nearly
>> enough current to justify wire gauges that heavy and all you'd end up
>with
>> are cumbersome cables and bulky plugs with a lot of unused capacity.
>Dryers
>> and ranges need at least 50 amps at 240 volts; your amp needs 10 amps at
>240
>> volts.
>
>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.
>
>Mike k1ern
>
>>
>>
>>
>> So, I'm not sure why you wouldn't leave the cord and just replace the
>120VAC
>> plug supplied with a 240 v. (e.g., one that looks like a "regular" plug
>> except that the flat pins are perpendicular to each other instead of
>> parallel) after you change the jumpers and fuses.
>>
>>
>>
>> 73 Neal N7RX
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>
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