brightspark
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lol i was working on a farm and there transformer had blew upAgricultural![]()


lol i was working on a farm and there transformer had blew upAgricultural![]()
it must have been an old p....ss poor transformer and feed. the boards cutout fuses generaly match the size of the supply cable so the cable cant be overloaded
and even without allowing for diversity u still have 20 amp more capacityI'm failing to see why if you have 63a available with other stuff running (my poxy little farm workshop has 100a to it!) That you can't run a big mig that is over 250a. My supply is quite happy with the 3hp compressor going and the plasma and me migging without a tripped fuse in sight, that's max draw 78a if they're all on full chat.
Not exactly. The fuse is to protect the circuit so, assuming the circuit has been designed and installed correctly, there is no problem with drawing 63A on a circuit protected by a 63A breaker.The idea of the fuse is not to overwork the cable etc.fuse the supply too high is kinda dumb! I have 100 amp to mine and an 80 amp fuse. Go get your 400 amp welder and run some measured 350amp runs off the single phase mains. This is something I was asking myself a few months back, found the answers and learned some things along the way, still looking for a big single phase MMA inverter 250 amp tec arc is the biggest I can find that a company will allow me to prove, saw Jims post on the lash up which got me thinking of other ways to skin cats though
When I asked around from people in the know about 240 amps is all you can get from a mig despite what people state the set will do, limit is the input power you cant exceed. I can attest that poor supplies will limit this further, I had new lines put in from overhead (3 phase in case of future) but running single at present and a separate meter feed to the shop and it did give me better than previous at the hot end.
reputable is a strange word to choose. If the machine has a maximum duty of 400 amps it don't mean the supply can give it nor does it mean the seller is lying. Think on about 110v and 240v and their limits then think 415v. I think you mis understand my point and its the fuse should trip way before the safe load of the cable is reached on the supply, if not then we might as well replace the fuse with a section of 6" nail.
Of course the machine's maximum duty only sets an expectation of the supply requirement, not a guarantee that the supply will be adequate.
And, of course, 415v has much higher limits than 240v.
But my point is that a properly installed cable, with a likely CSA of 16mm2, will happily supply 63 amps all day long, assuming that this (or more) power is available at the consumer unit / distribution board, and that a 63A MCB is installed.
If a circuit is (properly) designed for 63A then you don't need to do anything to "de-rate" that supply and you can safely consume 63A from it. Incidentally, MCBs will trip at a level that far exceeds the actual capacity of the cable (5-10 times for B curves and 10-20 times for C curves).
That all said, you can absolutely consume 14.5KW from a 63A circuit (assuming 230V, closer to 15.7KW at 250V) so if you have a welder that is capable of consuming that level of power, then I would expect that the welder will output what the manufacturer states.
I guess the bit I'm having difficulty with (and I may be mis-reading what you're saying) is that you don't seem to believe the manufacturers claims, or that they could be fed that much power on a single-phase supply.
i realy dont get it. 80 percent of domestic supplies are minimum 60 amp mains fuse so unless u load everything else up at the same time u wont have any bother unless your in outlying aerias on long overhead lines and use the power at peak periodsSurely if you can run say a 250 amp machine on a 32 amp supply then with a supply rated at almost twice that there wouldn't be any problem with a higher powered machine producing much more than 250 amps??![]()