Folks -
My dust collector is a 1.5 hp Penn State DC-2, I also have a smaller
collector, the DC1B-XL, a 1hp unit
The 1.5HP unit's label says it draws 18a at 110 or 9a at 220... It never
tripped a breaker running on a 15a 100 circuit - in fact, I had been running
it, and my Delta Drum Sander on the same circuit - I think I was lucky.
My question for the larger collector is this: If it draws 18a on 110, and
the max that you are supposed to draw on a 15 or 20a circuit is 80%, then I
shouldn't run anything over 12a on the 15 and 16a on the 20... how can they
sell the 1.5hp unit to run on 110?
I would like to run the smaller collector as a dedicated unit for the
tablesaw and rewire the larger unit to run on 220. The wierd thing is, is
that the smaller unit (1HP) also says it draws 18/9 amps...
Would any of the electrical types on the rec be able to tell me how much
current a 1 HP and a 1.5hp motor would use during steady operation? I am
assuming that the amperage ratings on the data plates are for start up
current, rather than continuous draw.
I'd sure appreciate it if someone could fill in the gaps/chasms in my
knowledge. I'll be working on the rest of my electrical layout for the new
shop and will likely have a number of other questions as things progress, so
I'd suggest that you run like hell, or you may end up being my new best
friend! Thanks in advance...
John Moorhead
"John Moorhead" <[email protected]> wrote in message news:<[email protected]>...
> Folks -
snip
> My question for the larger collector is this: If it draws 18a on 110, and
> the max that you are supposed to draw on a 15 or 20a circuit is 80%, then I
> shouldn't run anything over 12a on the 15 and 16a on the 20... how can they
> sell the 1.5hp unit to run on 110?
John,
I don't know the answers to all of your questions. I am pondering some
different wiring scenarios for my Dust collectors also. One of them is
three phase.
However, I wanted to tell you that I overlooked your post several
times thinking you were talking about battery operated tools. I also
refer to dust collectors as DC but in the context of power, I think
Direct Current. I wonder if you would get more hits spelling it out
for us.
I would like to see more feedback to your question and am now
following this thread.
Good luck,
Eric
Who knows. They are all over the map. The best thing to do is get a cheap
clamp on ammeter from HF and find out the truth. I use mine often and enjoy
having it.
As stated here so many times, 1HP=746 Watts.
1.5 HP=1119 Watts. Since the motor has a power factor of about 0.8, you
need more amps, say about 12, for 1.5 HP and 8 for 1 HP. But who knows how
heavily the fan is loading the motor...depends on the rotor design.
Unless your DC is on for hours, I wouldn't worry about the load factor (the
80% you mentioned). House circuits are very conservatively designed and the
breakers will trip long before you could possibly heat up any wire or
connection in good condition.
Since all wire carries twice the HP at 240 as at 120, it's obvious that
using 240 makes things cheaper to install and allows more stuff on the same
circuit. It's a myth that the tools work better on 240, ASSUMING that the
circuit is properly sized. Now if you need to run your TS 200 feet out in
the yard, 240 is LOTS better, because your 200 ft cord probably won't be big
enough to really supply 120V at heavy currents.
Rule 1. Put in lots of recepptacles
Rule 2. You can't have too many receptacles.
Rule 3. Don't put all plugs on a circuit next to each other. Hop around a
bit so it's easy to plug adjacent loads into different circuits.
Rule 4. It takes a lot of lights to load a circuit, but it's nice to have
two, just so you don't go plum dark all at once. There's no reason not to
have a couple of lights on a tool circuit. The occasional blink won't hurt
you.
Wilson
"John Moorhead" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Folks -
>
> My dust collector is a 1.5 hp Penn State DC-2, I also have a smaller
> collector, the DC1B-XL, a 1hp unit
>
> The 1.5HP unit's label says it draws 18a at 110 or 9a at 220... It never
> tripped a breaker running on a 15a 100 circuit - in fact, I had been
running
> it, and my Delta Drum Sander on the same circuit - I think I was lucky.
>
> My question for the larger collector is this: If it draws 18a on 110, and
> the max that you are supposed to draw on a 15 or 20a circuit is 80%, then
I
> shouldn't run anything over 12a on the 15 and 16a on the 20... how can
they
> sell the 1.5hp unit to run on 110?
>
> I would like to run the smaller collector as a dedicated unit for the
> tablesaw and rewire the larger unit to run on 220. The wierd thing is, is
> that the smaller unit (1HP) also says it draws 18/9 amps...
>
> Would any of the electrical types on the rec be able to tell me how much
> current a 1 HP and a 1.5hp motor would use during steady operation? I am
> assuming that the amperage ratings on the data plates are for start up
> current, rather than continuous draw.
>
> I'd sure appreciate it if someone could fill in the gaps/chasms in my
> knowledge. I'll be working on the rest of my electrical layout for the
new
> shop and will likely have a number of other questions as things progress,
so
> I'd suggest that you run like hell, or you may end up being my new best
> friend! Thanks in advance...
>
> John Moorhead
>
>
>
> Would any of the electrical types on the rec be able to tell me how much
> current a 1 HP and a 1.5hp motor would use during steady operation? I am
> assuming that the amperage ratings on the data plates are for start up
> current, rather than continuous draw.
The current draw of the motor will depend on the load, which in a DC
is proportional to the airflow.
I have a 2 HP Penn State DC. Nameplate amps are, surprise, 18/9 at
120/240V (hmmm... starting to wonder if Penn State uses the same label
for all their motors).
The actual running current, with the 5" inlet wide open, is 6.5A at
240V. The only way I ever got it up to the full 9A was by running it
with the impeller cover removed (maximum airflow, producing maxium
current draw). Startup current is much higher - about 40A at 240V.
Scaling these numbers down will give you a ballpark estimate for 1 and
1.5 HP machines.
In article <[email protected]>, [email protected] (Rob Dingnagian) wrote:
>"John Moorhead" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:<[email protected]>...
>> Folks -
>snip
>> My question for the larger collector is this: If it draws 18a on 110, and
>> the max that you are supposed to draw on a 15 or 20a circuit is 80%, then I
>> shouldn't run anything over 12a on the 15 and 16a on the 20... how can they
>> sell the 1.5hp unit to run on 110?
120V circuits are not limited to 20 amps, of course. There's no reason this
unit could not be supplied with a circuit consisting of 10-gauge wire
protected by a 30A breaker.
Also, the 80% standard refers to continuous loads, which is defined as "a load
where the maximum current is expected to continue for three hours or more."
The 18A rating is most likely the startup current on the dust collector motor;
while running it probably draws a good bit less than that. Even if it draws
the full 18 amps while running, it still meets the definition of a
non-continuous load unless you normally run it for three hours at a time.
--
Regards,
Doug Miller (alphageek-at-milmac-dot-com)
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