imfromjapanman
Well-Known Member
hello i was wondering if i can use 600hps and 400hps two ballasts on one plug? or will it cause fire? thank u !!
hello i was wondering if i can use 600hps and 400hps two ballasts on one plug? or will it cause fire? thank u !!
It depends on what else is on the circuit.
All depends on the breaker or fuse that its on, add up the amps that both of them draw then check your fuse/breaker box and find out what amps it is set for. Stay a few under that amount and you should be ok
All depends on the breaker or fuse that its on, add up the amps that both of them draw then check your fuse/breaker box and find out what amps it is set for. Stay a few under that amount and you should be ok
you shouldnt be using more than 1440 watts per receptacle as a rule... even then it should be a spec grade receptacle on a dedicated circuit, or else your going to have problems....
1000w is a more realistic approach, but if your pulling as much power as you say id be nervous.
ps- im a journeyman electrician.
no. thats too much wattage for a surge protector. not for the surge protector itself, but too much for the plug it is plugged into. over time the inrush current from the fans and lights starting up will weaken the spring tabs that make contact with the blades of the plug on the power strip; this will cause a build up of heat, and that will cause a fire. having the lights and fans on the same outlet like that is begging for problems. the safest bet would be to find another circuit to run anything but the lights.do u think ill be fine with 400hps ballast, 600HPs digital, 2 fans, and stanley blower all plugged into surge protector on one plug? i just use 12amps on 15amps as example i havent added them up yet.
do u think ill be fine with 400hps ballast, 600HPs digital, 2 fans, and stanley blower all plugged into surge protector on one plug? i just use 12amps on 15amps as example i haven't added them up yet.
no. thats too much wattage for a surge protector. not for the surge protector itself, but too much for the plug it is plugged into. over time the inrush current from the fans and lights starting up will weaken the spring tabs that make contact with the blades of the plug on the power strip; this will cause a build up of heat, and that will cause a fire. having the lights and fans on the same outlet like that is begging for problems. the safest bet would be to find another circuit to run anything but the lights.
if your lucky, you can run the fans off of another outlet n the same room, and the breaker MAY hold, tho i would not reccomend this, grow ops require continous duty rating, because of the long times of the light period. for HID lights used in a grow op your going to be limited to 1152w @ 120v per 15amp circuit.
you have to think of it like this- would you leave a 1000w space heater plugged into your wall unattended for hours and hours at a time? because thats basically what your doing with the lights... a load that big should really be hardwired to a dedicated outlet or split up between 2 circuits.
plug next to that has desktop computer, ps3, cable box, and 40in LCD tv.. how should i go about this? thank u again sir
thats NOT a breaker... its a GFCI (ground fault circuit interruptor) it measures the power in vs. power out. if there is a descrepency (like a short circuit ) it trips. it is not a circuit breaker and should never be used for that purpose....in your grow room you should always use kitchen/bath plug sockets they have the 15 amp breaker built in with the reset button and always use a power bar that way you should never have any power outlet problems because you have triple the protection power box/outlet/power bar.