I would revisit running a 240 outlet into the shack. You would need very
large conductors to have the power supply that far away and laying these wires on the floor would certainly not be aesthetically pleasing. It is sometimes a bit of work and may require some drywall repair however I cannot imagine a situation were running another electrical circuit is not possible. How do you get all of the other cables into your shack? Find a different electrician. MY Aruba home had solid concrete walls and I added a 240v outlet. John KK9A [Elecraft] How far can the KPA1500 amp be from the PS? Dauer, Edward edauer at law.du.edu The KPA1500 Manual states that "the power supply can be operated remotely" and that the supplied cables are 66 inches long. It does not say how far apart, beyond the 66 inches, the PS and the amp can be without affecting performance or creating other issues. Does anyone know? There are apparently three cables - the main HV, the 15-pin control, and the 12VDC phono plug cable for remote turn-on of the amp. I am thinking about buying a KPA1500 but may have trouble bringing 220 VAC into the shack. One electrician I hired long ago to look at the question told me it could not be done in an aesthetically acceptable way given the nature of the construction of the basement walls where the station is. That's why I bought the KPA500 rather than a KW amp at the time. There is a 220 VAC outlet in another room on another floor of the house, which might allow me to lay some long cables while I am trying to figure out how to get 220 into the shack. It is used to power the cook-top so the current capacity is likely sufficient - which I check by looking at the breakers. The tripping hazard of doing this might itself be unacceptable, but I'd like to think about it. The other possibility would be using a 220 VAC extension cord and locating the PS in the shack itself, but that seems even more dangerous . . . Thoughts, anyone? Thanks, as always, Ted, KN1CBR ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html Message delivered to [hidden email] |
I concur... Should have replied to the original post. Sorry.
OK... you NEED 240 in the shack, so if you are going to do it... and you should, do it right. Put a sub-panel in the basement and take at least a 60, preferably an 80+ Amp line from the main box to the sub-panel. Then hack out 120 and 240 circuits as required... I have 240 x 15 and 20 Amp duplexes and 4 x 120 x 20 Amp duplexes to make danged sure I will never have to address power issues again. The 240 comes from the main box in a 4-wire, 2 sizes bigger copper than required, so I can boost the power at the mains later if need be by swapping breaker set without busting code. The 2 x 120 legs are twisted pair, and the ground and neutral wires are twisted pairs. Both pairs are run in steel flex conduit from mains to sub. From sub to duplexes are also run in steel flex. ALL duplexes are mounted in metal boxes.... From the metal boxes back to the main panel box is ONE CONTINUOUS electrical connection with very, very low resistance, and of course the main breaker box is grounded as per code. I never even think about if my power is the issue now... On 04/28/18 09:52, [hidden email] wrote: > I would revisit running a 240 outlet into the shack. You would need very > large conductors to have the power supply that far away and laying these > wires on the floor would certainly not be aesthetically pleasing. It is > sometimes a bit of work and may require some drywall repair however I cannot > imagine a situation were running another electrical circuit is not possible. > How do you get all of the other cables into your shack? Find a different > electrician. MY Aruba home had solid concrete walls and I added a 240v > outlet. > > John KK9A > > > [Elecraft] How far can the KPA1500 amp be from the PS? > Dauer, Edward edauer at law.du.edu > > The KPA1500 Manual states that "the power supply can be operated remotely" > and that the supplied cables are 66 inches long. It does not say how far > apart, beyond the 66 inches, the PS and the amp can be without affecting > performance or creating other issues. > > Does anyone know? There are apparently three cables - the main HV, the > 15-pin control, and the 12VDC phono plug cable for remote turn-on of the > amp. > > I am thinking about buying a KPA1500 but may have trouble bringing 220 VAC > into the shack. One electrician I hired long ago to look at the question > told me it could not be done in an aesthetically acceptable way given the > nature of the construction of the basement walls where the station is. > That's why I bought the KPA500 rather than a KW amp at the time. There is a > 220 VAC outlet in another room on another floor of the house, which might > allow me to lay some long cables while I am trying to figure out how to get > 220 into the shack. It is used to power the cook-top so the current > capacity is likely sufficient - which I check by looking at the breakers. > > The tripping hazard of doing this might itself be unacceptable, but I'd like > to think about it. The other possibility would be using a 220 VAC extension > cord and locating the PS in the shack itself, but that seems even more > dangerous . . . > > Thoughts, anyone? > > Thanks, as always, > > Ted, KN1CBR > > ______________________________________________________________ > Elecraft mailing list > Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft > Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm > Post: mailto:[hidden email] > > This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net > Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html > Message delivered to [hidden email] ______________________________________________________________ Elecraft mailing list Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/elecraft Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm Post: mailto:[hidden email] This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html Message delivered to [hidden email] |
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