no that means you have 20a, the one below it says b20, which means type b that's how quickly it senses a fault.....b is standard in a house and the 20 means 20a. You will have to be running shit loads off lights and fans etc to overload your breaker
example 400w hps = roughly 1.7a.
to work out how much ampage a appliance uses just take the wattage and divide it by 230
hope that helps
no that means you have 20a, the one below it says b20, which means type b that's how quickly it senses a fault.....b is standard in a house and the 20 means 20a. You will have to be running shit loads off lights and fans etc to overload your breaker
example 400w hps = roughly 1.7a.
to work out how much ampage a appliance uses just take the wattage and divide it by 230
hope that helps
I am far from an electrician but isn't there more to it than that?
Going by 1.7a, you could run 10 400 watt lights. I am pretty sure the breaker would trip with a lot less than 10 400 watt lights correct?
So if I was living in USA then I'd have a problem to run two 1000W + one 600W. I see they only use 110V. So 2600:110=23Amps while in Europe it only be 2600:230=11 Amps. Do I understand it correctly?
That cannot be right. 2600 watts will trip a 20a breaker. No doubt about it.
That cannot be right. 2600 watts will trip a 20a breaker. No doubt about it.
Which one, the 110V breaker or 230V breaker?