CNC machines are NOT 'house electrician' level work.
Where did you get the idea that this was a 'house installation'?
CNC machines are NOT 'house electrician' level work.
Where did you get the idea that this was a 'house installation'?
You're nuts. Maybe at the end of a 100 yard long run. Maybe.
There is no reason, however, for the entire feed to a building to sag that far between loaded and unloaded.
It's called a thermostat
Of course. I was jesting.
You're an idiot. That is like saying that if you hire an electrician to run 245Volts to your 120 volt microwave oven, he'll do it, and will not be at fault for doing something against the rules.
High power devices should never, repeat NEVER be hooked up merely "to the disconnect". It should ALWAYS be examined for its POWER panel connections to insure against improper attachment. PERIOD!
Goddamned cross posting retards! < reference to the OP.
You're a semantical twit.
It was obvious to me what he was referring to.
Distribution feeds.
CE? I am surprised that they did not want it to read "95 - 265 VAC"
That is what most CE equipment works at.
It makes a product that barely works in Japan's 90V realm, and then only on some products.
I had to do a redesign to insure that a production printer (supply)would be marketable/functional in Japanese geographical/voltage markets.
RCM only, you turkeys
On Sun, 05 Jul 2009 07:50:13 GMT, the infamous "Harold and Susan Vordos" scrawled the following:
Oy, vay, 'Arry. These are trollings. Filter them and be happy.
P.S: Do you see the names and email addresses of these guys? Isn't that enough to clue y'all in?
P.P.S: How does that hook feel, sticking out of your cheek like that?
-- After silence, that which comes nearest to expressing the inexpressible is music. -- Aldous Huxley
I know about that. I lived in Japan once. 100vac and 200vac power distribution, half the country was 50 cycle and the other 60 cycle back then.
Wes
distribution, half the
A japanese physicist I know always said that failing to unitize the power grid is the biggest thing that the Japanese people have against the US occupation forces.
distribution, half the
I always wondered why they even started out using to different frequencies.
Just dags and found it is still messed up. I was there in the late 70's.
I wasn't aware of this nightmare. I feel slightly better now about the fact that our U.S. made cars have metric & imperial sized fasteners all over them while any other made car has just metric. It's all about the money & who gets the most of it.
Im not. Nor am I licensed. Yet I do the electrical work for many clients. And my business cards indicate that Im neither.
It has to do with how good you are, and that they know it.
"Lenin called them "useful idiots," those people living in liberal democracies who by giving moral and material support to a totalitarian ideology in effect were braiding the rope that would hang them. Why people who enjoyed freedom and prosperity worked passionately to destroy both is a fascinating question, one still with us today. Now the useful idiots can be found in the chorus of appeasement, reflexive anti-Americanism, and sentimental idealism trying to inhibit the necessary responses to another freedom-hating ideology, radical Islam"
Bruce C. Thornton, a professor of Classics at American University of Cal State Fresno
Then you have been in few CNC shops west of the Mississippie.
Gunner
"Lenin called them "useful idiots," those people living in liberal democracies who by giving moral and material support to a totalitarian ideology in effect were braiding the rope that would hang them. Why people who enjoyed freedom and prosperity worked passionately to destroy both is a fascinating question, one still with us today. Now the useful idiots can be found in the chorus of appeasement, reflexive anti-Americanism, and sentimental idealism trying to inhibit the necessary responses to another freedom-hating ideology, radical Islam"
Bruce C. Thornton, a professor of Classics at American University of Cal State Fresno
Which demonstrates how little you know. I've worked with several CNC machines intended for secondary operations that could be moved around the shop as needed. All ran off a line cord.
David
Note: That was a slash, not a dash. This was not a "universal input", it was a dual-voltage device, with a 2:1 switchable primary. I was surprised that they didn't want 110/220 or 120/240 or 115/230. Nope, they insisted on 110/240. Go figure.
Yes and start out by NOT cross posting horseshit questions into several groups.
That is a retarded nym, but somehow the stupidity of it does fit you.
Do you even know how old the machine is? Doh!
Technically it should be 120/240, I think the examiner wasn?t awfully intelligent. Was this a UL CB ?
Cheers
Does your work get inspected? (no, I do not mean by you, idiot)
You may be a professional something, but 'professional electrician' will not be the title.
" snipped-for-privacy@fonz.dk" wrote in news: snipped-for-privacy@c9g2000yqm.googlegroups.com:
No neutral involved if the tap is marked 220, just two hots.
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