Good morning all,
My project is going well (takin long but advancing). I am now doing the electrical. I have no problem doing the 120V wiring. I think I understand the concept of AC at 120V. Correct me if I'm wrong: The black, being the hot wire, brings the power to the outlet, and the white, being the neutral, returns to the CB panel, thereby completing the circuit (almost like DC?).
However, with 240V, we use a double pole breaker (both breakers activate at once by means of a mechanical joint (clip) on the breaker handle. The red is hot, the black is hot but what brings the power back to the panel to complete the circuit? Surely not the ground! Hell even with the stove or dryer circuit there's a white or neutral wire completing the circuit at the breaker panel.
So how come heaters only use 2 hot wires?
I need the explanation from an electrician, but more urgently I need someone to show me on the accompanying diagram how to wire my particular heating circuit. It involves 2 blower heaters in the kitchen and one in the bathroom. Each heater must be controlled by its own thermostat. These are simple 2 wire t-stats (digital) that I've used before. I just do not know how to run the wires to utilize only 1 breaker spot (or circuit) in the panel. The situation in the apartment I've renovated has all the heaters on this 1 breaker. I want to use 1 breaker for my new kitchen/bathroom reno, and reconnect the other heaters using the original breaker. I do not think the total wattage of my new blower heaters will exceed the maximum allowable for the breaker but I will check on that.
Help!
Thanks,
Craig
My project is going well (takin long but advancing). I am now doing the electrical. I have no problem doing the 120V wiring. I think I understand the concept of AC at 120V. Correct me if I'm wrong: The black, being the hot wire, brings the power to the outlet, and the white, being the neutral, returns to the CB panel, thereby completing the circuit (almost like DC?).
However, with 240V, we use a double pole breaker (both breakers activate at once by means of a mechanical joint (clip) on the breaker handle. The red is hot, the black is hot but what brings the power back to the panel to complete the circuit? Surely not the ground! Hell even with the stove or dryer circuit there's a white or neutral wire completing the circuit at the breaker panel.
So how come heaters only use 2 hot wires?
I need the explanation from an electrician, but more urgently I need someone to show me on the accompanying diagram how to wire my particular heating circuit. It involves 2 blower heaters in the kitchen and one in the bathroom. Each heater must be controlled by its own thermostat. These are simple 2 wire t-stats (digital) that I've used before. I just do not know how to run the wires to utilize only 1 breaker spot (or circuit) in the panel. The situation in the apartment I've renovated has all the heaters on this 1 breaker. I want to use 1 breaker for my new kitchen/bathroom reno, and reconnect the other heaters using the original breaker. I do not think the total wattage of my new blower heaters will exceed the maximum allowable for the breaker but I will check on that.
Help!
Thanks,
Craig
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