No happiness in Mudville....
I actually had a question about your 20 amp line. 12 ga wire, right? Would using 10 ga with a 20 amp breaker and outlet do anything bad?
I think your pushing a bit too hard on the waste of money deal,really i do.
Lets look at the reality of this,how many home owners have a dedicated 15 amp line that their system is hooked into....
I have had time to cogitate some more on this. And some other issues that are not readily apparent to the average use of this board are in play.
Factory Mutual through the NEC (in the USA, CSA in Canada) is forcing standardization on home/dwelling construction as maybe seen with 15A 120VAC circuit becoming the standard circuit size in most new construction (last 30 years or so.) Standard 3-blade outlets one sees nowdays are rated for 15A. It is against code to wire/use these (15A) receptacles on a 20A circuit. On 20A ckts, one must use receptacles rated for 20A (the ones with the rotated “T” for the “line” blade shown below.)
Devices with a 20A rating will have a plug that mates with these and will not fit a 15A receptacle by design! See below.
So what does this mean? If your device comes with a 15A plug then it is was designed, tested and rated for 15A service. If it come with a 20A plug likewise is the case. You cannot plug a 20A rated device into a 15A receptacle by design. Why does this matter? Common small applicances with low current needs may use wire smaller than #14AWG so the NEC want to prevent plugging these into a 20A source since these can become a fire hazard without the ckt bkr tripping.
Now, let's revisit the #10 AWG on a 20A ckt bkr, Alex mused about. Suppose one wanted to install a 30A bkr to increase the available power sometime in the future. Then by code, one will have to change ALL the receptacles to 30A ones as pictured here assuming the whole ckt is indeed wired with #10AWG.
So, what if you want to run 30A (or more) to your system. The code is forcing you to do something this:
How this helps explain the problems with adding larger circuits.
There is nothing wrong with assuring your system has a dedicated supply line, aside from air conditioners they are the the highest wattage devices in the home & the 2400 watt draw that sparked this discussion is equal to 2 hair dryers set on max from the same outlet,not a good idea.
Indeed, feed you system well. I never denied that! But oh, dear, I must be slumming. Electric ovens, cooktops, hot water heaters, clothes dryers, big refrigerator/freezers (SubZero), strip heating, hot tubs, whirlpools, garden tubs, swimming pools, tennis courts, saunna, steam room, attic fans don't exist in your world? My wife has three 15A circuits in her dressing room alone just for all the vanity lights, hair dryers, hot rollers, hair curls, etc, etc., etc. 'cause like last time I looked, most were 1200 to 1500 watts each. And she feels about them like you feel about McIntosh eq—you just can't have too many or too much.