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New Member
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Feb 11, 2013, 04:26 PM
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Furnace with double breaker
I'm putting in a Payne electric furance only, No air The furnace has 2 220 breakers, inside When I run my wire from The main breaker box to the unit, Do I put the wire on each side of the breakerand jumper in the middle or do I run the wire to one of the breaker. Thanks
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Uber Member
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Feb 11, 2013, 05:32 PM
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On a 240 volt system there are 2 conductors and a ground. Using the appropriate gauge wire, one wire goes to each breaker and terminal on the heater. Ground goes from panel ground to ground terminal. There are no "jumpers ".PS 220 does not exist today in the US. Do not attempt to install a 240 circuit yourself if you don't know what you are doing. 240 will kill you!!
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New Member
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Feb 11, 2013, 05:35 PM
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 Originally Posted by ma0641
On a 240 volt system there are 2 conductors and a ground. Using the appropriate guage wire, one wire goes to each breaker and terminal on the heater. Ground goes from panel ground to ground terminal. There are no "jumpers ".PS 220 does not exist today in the US. Do not attempt to install a 240 circuit yourself if you don't know what you are doing. 240 will kill you!!!
OK thanks
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Uber Member
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Feb 12, 2013, 07:01 AM
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 Originally Posted by bobclay65
ok thanks
If my answer was helpful please check "helpful ". Thanks
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Ultra Member
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Feb 13, 2013, 09:14 PM
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 Originally Posted by ma0641
On a 240 volt system there are 2 conductors and a ground. Using the appropriate guage wire, one wire goes to each breaker and terminal on the heater. Ground goes from panel ground to ground terminal. There are no "jumpers ".PS 220 does not exist today in the US. Do not attempt to install a 240 circuit yourself if you don't know what you are doing. 240 will kill you!!!
Ma, on some (Rheem, Rudd, & Weather King that I kow of) electric furnaces with a pair of double pole breakers you can run a common feed & install a jumper between the two internal breakers. The jumper kit is available from Rheem. It's the same principal as a breaker panel. The breakers are protecting what's downstream of them.
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Uber Member
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Feb 13, 2013, 09:21 PM
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 Originally Posted by Grady White
Ma, on some (Rheem, Rudd, & Weather King that I kow of) electric furnaces with a pair of double pole breakers you can run a common feed & install a jumper between the two internal breakers. The jumper kit is available from Rheem. It's the same principal as a breaker panel. The breakers are protecting what's downstream of them.
I reread the post and did note "pair of 220" my bad. So in essence one breaker set protects the other? I am so used to straight 240 inHVAC and not paired.
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Ultra Member
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Feb 14, 2013, 05:39 PM
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Ma,
No. The breakers (usually a 30 & a 60) each protect part of the load. For example: the 30 might be tied to the control system, fan, & 5kw of heat while the 60 is often tied to an additional 10kw.
In an application such as this & with the use of the jumper, the electrician could run a single line capable of carrying the full load instead of having to run two lines.
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