 |
|
|
 |
New Member
|
|
Mar 5, 2008, 10:04 PM
|
|
Furnace on a 15amp breaker
We purchased a house and have been going through the eletrical and cleaning up some of there "mess" OK lazy ness to make sure evreything is correct. We have the majority of it all cleaned up. However, we came across something that seemed odd. The Furnace (gas) is on a dedicated 15amp breaker. Shouldn't this be on a dedicated 20amp breaker? Is there a way to tell? If so how? Also can it be moved to a 20 amp w/ only a little bit of pain?
Thanks as always for all the good ideas.
|
|
 |
Home Improvement & Construction Expert
|
|
Mar 5, 2008, 10:56 PM
|
|
Granted you would expect a 20 circuit but if its working on a 15amp circuit leave it alone. If you like you can look at the electrical plate and see just how many amps it requires. All this assuming you are talking about a gas or oil fired furnace. They don't have much more than a fan motor.
|
|
 |
New Member
|
|
Mar 5, 2008, 11:02 PM
|
|
Agreed I wouldn't normally mess with it if its working. But evrything else in the house kind of worked funny till we cleaned up the electrcal mess someone left for us and things seem to be working much better now. So we figured this would be easy as I have an extra empty 20amp breaker I could move it to. This would allow me to put a some electrical outlets and lights on a nice simple 15amp breaker. So where would I look on the furnace to see what is truly reguried.
|
|
 |
Electrical & Lighting Expert
|
|
Mar 6, 2008, 05:04 AM
|
|
You would look at the rating sticker. But I also ask, WHY mess with it?? Why do you ASSUME it is wrong? Most gas furnaces are on, or can be on, a 15A branch circuit.
If it is on a 15 there is a pretty good chance it needs to be. I bet it is wired with #14 so "moving the circuit to a 20A" would require re-wiring the WHOLE circuit, including the emergency switch.
Why not put your nice new receptacles on the nice simple spare 20 you have? Or you can go out and buy another simple $4 15A breaker if all you have is #14 wire.
|
|
 |
Uber Member
|
|
Mar 6, 2008, 05:18 AM
|
|
I hope you realize that the wiring must be rated for the capacity, or higher of the breaker.
e.g. for typical 15 and 20 Amp circuits
20 A breaker can use 12 AWG wire
15 A breaker can use 14 AWG or 12 AWG wire
|
|
 |
New Member
|
|
Mar 6, 2008, 09:07 AM
|
|
I only assume it may be wrong as 90% of the other things we found in the house was wired wrong. So we just wanted to check. Everything is 12-2 wire so that part should be fine. So I will look at the furance and see what we find. Where would the requriments be on the furnace itself. Am I looking for a red plate w/ things on it?
|
|
 |
Home Improvement & Construction Expert
|
|
Mar 6, 2008, 09:52 AM
|
|
Not necessairly, probably be a silver colored sticker giving all information about furnace such as type of fuel, clearances, BTU's. Probably in the area of the gas valve assuming gas furnace.
|
|
 |
New Member
|
|
Mar 6, 2008, 10:50 AM
|
|
Sounds great I will look tonight :)
|
|
Question Tools |
Search this Question |
|
|
Add your answer here.
Check out some similar questions!
15AMP Breaker used instead of 20AMP -ok?
[ 4 Answers ]
We just had an electric gate installed that extends across our driveway. I noticed that the installer used a 15 amp breaker switch to connect to for power (the gate is the only device on this breaker). In looking at the manual last night the installation instructions call for a 20 AMP breaker (the...
Switching from 15AMP breaker to 20AMP
[ 6 Answers ]
I am contemplating switching my 15AMP breaker into a 20AMP breaker because the lights flicker in my home office because my computer and printer eat up a lot of power.
If I switch breakers, will this help my power problem? Or I am limited to the gauge of the wires in the wall? Thanks for the...
Adding a 20amp receptacle to a 15amp breaker
[ 2 Answers ]
Hi All,
I need to install a small tankless water heater (made for under the lavatory sink) for the sink in my bathroom. The specs on the water heater are: 120 Volts, 2.4kW, 20 Amps, wire size: 10AWG. My question is this... The existing bathroom outlet that I want to splice into to add this water...
Must reset furnace breaker to activate
[ 3 Answers ]
I installed a ritetemp digital thermostat and appear to have 2 problems. 1) I’m not getting any ac to the thermostat, so it does not activate the furnace. I know I need to check the 24v transformer and common per the other threads. But, if I go to the circuit breaker panel and reset the furnace (80...
View more questions
Search
|