how to wire 220 basement outlets + protection


pjtoledo

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getting ready to wire up the new lathe, in the basement.
2hp, 220 volts, 12 amp full load. manual calls for 6-15 outlet, 14 ga wire, 15a breaker. 2 hots and a ground, no neutral.
I'll probably step up to 6-20 receptacle using 12ga wire and a 20 breaker. slight overkill/planning ahead.
will run dedicated metal conduit from box to the outlet, then HD power cord.
I'll also run a separate dedicated ground from the machine to the main ground going to the water line, hard wired.

since I'll be standing on the concrete floor my concern is fault protection, what does 220 use for GFCI?

on a side note, what about the 220 clothes drier?
 
getting ready to wire up the new lathe, in the basement.
2hp, 220 volts, 12 amp full load. manual calls for 6-15 outlet, 14 ga wire, 15a breaker. 2 hots and a ground, no neutral.
I'll probably step up to 6-20 receptacle using 12ga wire and a 20 breaker. slight overkill/planning ahead.
will run dedicated metal conduit from box to the outlet, then HD power cord.
I'll also run a separate dedicated ground from the machine to the main ground going to the water line, hard wired.

since I'll be standing on the concrete floor my concern is fault protection, what does 220 use for GFCI?

on a side note, what about the 220 clothes drier?
@Jim Oaks @Curious Hound @franklin2 any tips for pj?

Eric is a professional electrician. Jim just did a lot of wire installation to his shop, including a 220 circuit, if I remember correctly, so has recent experience. Franklin seems to have a lot of electrical knowledge swirling around in his brain pan as well. I know enough to do automotive wiring but might get you killed when it comes to 220.
 
It's the 220 fault protection I need help with. getting enough power there to fry my arse is easy.

hell, I could just run an extension cord across the concrete floor that's covered with sharp metal chips, right? :stop:
 
GFCI breaker, no? They're just ungodly expensive.

I wouldn't oversize the breaker for a single-purpose circuit. Follow what the equipment says, unless it's obviously stupid / contradicts code.
 
getting ready to wire up the new lathe, in the basement.
2hp, 220 volts, 12 amp full load. manual calls for 6-15 outlet, 14 ga wire, 15a breaker. 2 hots and a ground, no neutral.
I'll probably step up to 6-20 receptacle using 12ga wire and a 20 breaker. slight overkill/planning ahead.
will run dedicated metal conduit from box to the outlet, then HD power cord.
I'll also run a separate dedicated ground from the machine to the main ground going to the water line, hard wired.

since I'll be standing on the concrete floor my concern is fault protection, what does 220 use for GFCI?

on a side note, what about the 220 clothes drier?
Stick to the 6-15 receptacle and 15amp breaker. For a dedicated piece of equipment like this, code says the overcurrent orotection needs to be 125% of full load current. That's where the 15amps comes from. I would run 20amp wire in case you need to upgrade for a different piece of equipmemt in the future. But leave the breaker at 15amps. That protects the equipment in case of a short circuit. A 15amp breaker trips sooner/faster than a 20amp breaker. Therefore, fault current will not get as high before tripping and less equipment damage. GFCI is a good idea. They make 2 pole GFCI breakers.
 
The 14ga wire concerns me. I would think this would be at least 12ga. I wouldn't use 14ga to power anything more than lights on a 15 amp circuit.
 
I think you're overthinking things but agree with Eric above, that's what I did for the $30 220V air compressor I got at a garage sale... If the machine is grounded and the receptacle is grounded you should be fine
 
The 14ga wire concerns me. I would think this would be at least 12ga. I wouldn't use 14ga to power anything more than lights on a 15 amp circuit.
220V cuts the amps in half per leg, but yes I would go 12ga
 

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