Hi folks,
I'm installing a whirlpool tub which requires two separate 20 amp/120v circuits, one for the water pump motor, and another for a heated air blower...both with GFCIs. Manufacturer's tech guy was vague on the phone when I called to ask if both circuits needed to be on the same bus. He said the pump and blower need to be on separate circuits and only communicate with each other through the control boxes. OK, l'm thinking, and how do they communicate...sound waves? infra red? smoke signals? No...electricity! So, I'm playing it safe and pulling both circuits from the same bus in the panel so I don't fry a control board somewhere with 240v.
Here's the question. Can I run 12/3 NM-B from the panel and wire the hots to two separate new breakers and share the neutral from both circuits back to the panel? Or will the current produced by two simultaneous loads be too great to safely use the single 12 ga neutral? I guess another way to ask this question is how much current is present in the neutral wire of a single phase, 120 volt circuit with an imposed load of, say, 17 amps?
I'm installing a whirlpool tub which requires two separate 20 amp/120v circuits, one for the water pump motor, and another for a heated air blower...both with GFCIs. Manufacturer's tech guy was vague on the phone when I called to ask if both circuits needed to be on the same bus. He said the pump and blower need to be on separate circuits and only communicate with each other through the control boxes. OK, l'm thinking, and how do they communicate...sound waves? infra red? smoke signals? No...electricity! So, I'm playing it safe and pulling both circuits from the same bus in the panel so I don't fry a control board somewhere with 240v.
Here's the question. Can I run 12/3 NM-B from the panel and wire the hots to two separate new breakers and share the neutral from both circuits back to the panel? Or will the current produced by two simultaneous loads be too great to safely use the single 12 ga neutral? I guess another way to ask this question is how much current is present in the neutral wire of a single phase, 120 volt circuit with an imposed load of, say, 17 amps?
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