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3 MH and a big screen will trip the breaker. I know, i just had to run a separate circuit to my tank for this reason. Also take into account your heaters and pumps. You really can't run a tank your size on one circuit :)
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return pump ocean runnner 2500 ehiem 1260 skimmer pump 2x300 W heaters all n one circuit and a 20 amp for the 3x250's vortech maxi flow 25 W night lite. that should do it right and thanks to you all for the help tonight |
Dont do a gfci breaker, do a gfci receptacle instead.... Unless the plug will be behind your tank. That will save ya a hundred bucks or so. More so when it becomes weak and needs to be replaced. As a side note, yes ya can run a total of 12 devices off a 15amp circuit... Unless you know its intended purpose. Hopefully you put t-slot receptacles on your 20 amp circuit in your garage, your insurance company may give ya the boot if you ever have an issue out there.
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The thing to keep in mind is the purpose of the breaker, protection of the wire, not the device plugged into the outlet.
#14 = 15 amps #12 = 20 amps #10 = 30 amps etc etc max circuit load is 80 % |
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fp breakers are for welding, no stinger required lol
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I'm not an electrician. I wired my own house (complete 200 amp service, 4500sqft).
I work with several electricians, and asked one "if you were gonna build a new house for yourself, what would you do that most premade houses don't have?" His answer "I would install gfci outlets at the first outlet of each circuit". (If wired right it protects all remaining outlets on that circuit.) So, I did that, the inspector said there was nothing wrong with the way I wired it, very safe, but I would have tonnes of "nuisance trips" from the outlets. Well I did, and promptly rewired almost all GFCI outlets so they only protected themselves, not the down line outlets. I know it was overkill and expensive, but what I did was run 14/3 to my fishtank circuit, which is 2 seperate double plugs. (Be careful if you do this, research it a lot.) The white (neutral) is shared with the 2 hot circuits (red/black). In the panel I put in a double pole 15amp GFCI breaker ( $150 breaker). I regret running the 14/3, that locked me into a 2 pole breaker, which is more money. If I did it again I would run either 2 lines of 14/2 and 2 single pole 15 amp gfci breakers or better yet 2 @ 12/2 lines and 2 single pole 20 amp gfci breakers. Reason being, if one circuit trips, it trips both breakers, meaning all my pumps die, except my return pump in the basement which runs in the sump and is plugged into a gfci plug on a whole other circuit. |
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