jea48 said:
" A manufacture can build, and does, a power cord that has an IEC 20 amp female connector on one end and a 5-15P plug on the other end. "cleeds
Quite so. And, if the device itself draws 15A of current or less, that’s perfectly safe.
No, the equipment shall not draw more than 12 amps FLA continuous load per NEMA, NEC, and UL for a cord and plug where the manufacture wants to use a NEMA 5-15 (15 amp) male plug.
16 amps max for a 20 amp cord and plug if the equipment manufacture wants to use a NEMA 5-20P male plug.
Works great when the equipment comes with a captive held attached power cord.
How about the guy that goes out and buys a big honken Krell amp that has a 20 amp male IEC connector on the back of the unit, a power cord made of #10 wire, conductors, with a 20 amp IEC connector and a NEMA 5-15 (15 amp) male plug on the other end. The user plugs the NEMA 5-15P plug in convenience outlet 15 amp duplex receptacle in the living room, no problem at all. Perfect fit.
The user turns on the amp and trips the breaker in the electrical panel. The user calls the dealer and says, hey there is something wrong with the amp. Every time I try to turn on the amp it trips the breaker at the panel. I tried it at least a half a dozen times. Dealer response: The breaker is probably a 15 amp, just change it out to 20 amp breaker.
Next time you go to a hardware store or Home Depot see if you can find an extension cord with a 5-20R (20 amp) female cord cap on one end and a 5-15P (15 amp) plug on the other end. You won’t find one......