Please clarify ... the PS Audio Ports are rated for both 15amp and 20amp I'm told. Can they be installed in a 15amp dedicated line?
question about installation of 20 amp wall plug
I bought a replacement wall plug that is rated 20 amps. I installed it from a 15 amp circuit breaker, in the add it said it was ok to use in 15 or 20 amp. I pluged in a cheap intergraded amp to it and it and my speakers started popping and the amp started to smoke, I unplugged it right away. Was I wrong to assume that it would be ok coming from a 15 amp circuit, can anyone tell me what I did wrong, thanks
- ...
- 18 posts total
The receptacle has nothing to do with how much current is drawn, what is plugged into the receptacle does.True but the face plate of the receptacle configuration determines what plug can be connected to it. The max continuous load that a NEMA 5-15P can carry by NEC code is 12 amps. For a NEMA 5-20P plug it is 16 amps. NEC says for a 120V 15 amp branch circuit the receptacle must be a 15 amp rated receptacle. Reason being so a piece of equipment with a 20 plug cannot be plugged into it. As I said in my ealier post, the 20 amp recept did not cause the problem. http://www.frentzandsons.com/Hardware%20References/plugandreceptacleconfiguratio.htm |
Please clarify ... the PS Audio Ports are rated for both 15amp and 20amp I'm told. Can they be installed in a 15amp dedicated line?The receptacle will accept a NEMA 5-15P or 5-20P amp plug. Technically by code a 5-20R receptacle cannot be installed on a 120V 15 amp branch circuit. Will it cause any kind of a fired hazard if you use one for your audio equipment? No..... If you move just remember to pull the recept and replace it with a 15 amp recept so the next guy does not see the 20 amp recept and think he has a 20 amp branch circuit available. http://www.cryo-parts.com/ps_audio_power_port.html . |
- 18 posts total