Posted by 550Doug on March 10, 2020 at 09:04:15 from (204.237.56.195):
A few years ago I had an electrician install an electrical panel in my garage so that I could hook up my welder/generator to the house for partial backup in emergencies. The chosen circuits from the panel in the basement were re-routed into the garage panel. Everything is working just fine.
Yesterday I decided to redo my basement panel circuit layouts on the computer to make them look neater and more legible. In so doing I also recheck each circuit and discovered the following.
A basement circuit BP-4+5 has 40 amp breaker and controls rooms A,B and C and the garage circuit GP-14 (15 amp) controls room B and circuit GP-18 (15 amp) controls room C.
How can rooms B and C be both turned of from two different circuits, each on different panels?
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Today's Featured Article - Hydraulics - Cylinder Anatomy - by Curtis von Fange. Let’s make one more addition to our series on hydraulics. I’ve noticed a few questions in the comment section that could pertain to hydraulic cylinders so I thought we could take a short look at this real workhorse of the circuit. Cylinders are the reason for the hydraulic circuit. They take the fluid power delivered from the pump and magically change it into mechanical power. There are many types of cylinders that one might run across on a farm scenario. Each one could take a chapter in
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