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power supply cord for e-brew

Discussion in 'Electric Brewing' started by flanneltrees804, Sep 21, 2012.

 

  1. #1
    flanneltrees804

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Sep 21, 2012
    Currently in the final stages of a Kal clone and wondering about the main power cord. The breaker box is the house and the brew rig is 45' away in a detached garage. What I want to do is hook the spa panel up inside the house with a dryer plug built in and build a 55' power cord with the dryer plug on one end and the nema on the other. Is this going to be too much resistance? Am I going to have big power loss over the 55'?
     
  2. #2
    grandequeso

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Sep 21, 2012
    You're plenty fine. vd at 55' and 25 amps on #10awg is 3.4volts or 1.4%. (3% is max vd)
     
    stlbeer likes this.
  3. #3
    Francus

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Oct 1, 2012
    4 wire power cords are expensive over 10' in length everywhere I looked. I needed 20' and my solution was to buy 25' of 10awg wire, put the plug Kal recommends on on end and I got a 4 prong plug from eBay for the other. Even though the 4 prong was pricey, by the time you add the wire, prong, and Kal's plug it was still cheaper than getting a custom cord made. And so far it has worked fine. It's a bit stiff, though, as you might imagine, but no biggie. It works.
     
  4. #4
    flanneltrees804

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 1, 2012
    I have a hookup at mcmaster and get the cable for less than $2 foot which is still pricey when u need 60' but it's a lot better than most places.
     
  5. #5
    DustBow

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 1, 2012
    be sure to check ebay, I just bought 50' 10-awg for about $55 shipped
     
  6. #6
    rack04

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 1, 2012
    I think 10/4 sjoow power cable is only rated at 25 amps. You should really be looking at 8/4 soow power cable.
     
  7. #7
    flanneltrees804

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 1, 2012
    I've seen 14/4 rated at 300v and 30amp per lead...
     
  8. #8
    Ravenshead

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 2, 2012
    I'm using 50' of 10 gage in a similar situation. Works great for one heating element at a time. I suspect it will work fine for two but haven't tried it yet.
     
  9. #9
    flanneltrees804

    Well-Known Member

    Posted Oct 2, 2012
    I'm only running one element at a time and I think it was 12/4, not 14/4 that I was thinking of.
     
  10. #10
    Francus

    Well-Known Member  

    Posted Oct 2, 2012
    I'm just running one element and 2 pumps max at a time. So far it's worked for me. I have a BCS and it is set up to kill the other element before starting a new element just to be on the safe side.
     
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