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or get an electrician to do it.
FYI--While I neither endorse or recommend that a person installs a 20A receptacle on a 15A circuit, it is done all of the time by audiophiles. Lee
QuoteFYI--While I neither endorse or recommend that a person installs a 20A receptacle on a 15A circuit, it is done all of the time by audiophiles. Lee Audiophiles have been known to defy laws and codes.
Damn! I picked up a couple 20a outlets from Lowes today, but am now worried about installing these things on 15a circuits!!!It seems as long as you only plug 15a plugs into them you would be fine, but I also read that if you have a house fire for any reason, and the fire inspector notices 20a outlets where 15a belong........ no coverage... that would be bad.
Damn! I picked up a couple 20a outlets from Lowes today, but am now worried about installing these things on 15a circuits!!!It seems as long as you only plug 15a plugs into them you would be fine, but I also read that if you have a house fire for any reason, and the fire inspector notices 20a outlets where 15a belong........ no coverage... that would be bad.Looks like I may just hold off on the tweak and get the 15a outlet.Mark
Quote from: yooper on 3 Jun 2008, 12:25 amDamn! I picked up a couple 20a outlets from Lowes today, but am now worried about installing these things on 15a circuits!!!It seems as long as you only plug 15a plugs into them you would be fine, but I also read that if you have a house fire for any reason, and the fire inspector notices 20a outlets where 15a belong........ no coverage... that would be bad.Looks like I may just hold off on the tweak and get the 15a outlet.MarkI don't see how have a 20 amp outlet on a 15 amp line would cause any type of safety or insurance issue.Now a 15 amp outlet on a 20 amp line is a different kettle of fish... George
And where did you read that? Unless they can point to that as being the cause, there should be no way they could deny coverage for that.
According to table 210.21(B)(3) of the NEC code, a 15A branch circuit can only have a 15A receptacle attached. A 20A branch circuit can have either a 15A or a 20A receptacle attached.
I don't see how have a 20 amp outlet on a 15 amp line would cause any type of safety or insurance issue.Now a 15 amp outlet on a 20 amp line is a different kettle of fish... George
To keep it simple, lets forget about the wire gauge for this discussion.If you have a 20 amp breaker, you can use a 15 or 20 amp receptacle.
If you install a 15 amp outlet on a 20 amp breaker, you have under-protected the outlet by 5 amps. Besides being illegal, if you plug a device capable of more than 15 amps of current draw, the ampacity of the 15 amp outlet will be breached and melt down will start to occur in the outlet because the 20 amp breaker will not trip. Then you will have fire. Very bad.
1. To play it safe, always replace outlet with same amperage rating as circuit breaker.2. Never change out a 15 amp breaker with a 20 amp breaker (unless you change the wire gauge).3. Install wires according to instructions that came with the outlet.4. Better yet, have an electrician do it.
In residential wiring, I can understand why the NEC doesn't like this because it allows an over rated device to be plugged into the outlet. Of course, if the current goes over 15 amps, the breaker will trip, but the door mat says "20 amps welcome", when it's not.
If you install a 15 amp outlet on a 20 amp breaker, you have under-protected the outlet by 5 amps. Besides being illegal, if you plug a device capable of more than 15 amps of current draw, the ampacity of the 15 amp outlet will be breached and melt down will start to occur in the outlet because the 20 amp breaker will not trip. Then you will have fire. Very bad.No. Please check table 210.21(B)(3) of the NEC code, a 15A branch circuit can only have a 15A receptacle attached. A 20A branch circuit can have either a 15A or a 20A receptacle attached. The danger is that a 20A device could be plugged into a 15A circuit, the breaker fail and not trip, and start a fire.A 15A device plugged into a 20A circuit can draw 15A all day long and all will be well. A 20A device plugged into a 15A circuit would be bad, in the event the breaker did not trip. FYI--most commercially made receptacles 15A and 20A receptacles have the same guts, just different face plates
re-read my post. We're saying the same thing.
How's that for a bad explination?
Off topic--What is an "Audio by Van Alstine Participant"? Inquiring minds want to know.Lee
QuoteOff topic--What is an "Audio by Van Alstine Participant"? Inquiring minds want to know.LeeI do some work for Audio by Van Alstine and I'm required to identify myself as an associate by the AudioCircles commitee.Wayner