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One breaker in the North American electrical system will supply 110 volts. Two adjacent tied breakers will produce 220 volts.
2.3 kw per hour on a 110-120 volt circuit.
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You don't provide enough information to answer your question specifically. If the 20 A breaker is providing 110 Volts it can handle 20 Amps for a time. For continuous use you don't want to exceed 16 Amps. As long as your two 110 Volt devices draw less than a total of 16 Amps when you add the current rating of each device, then you are okay.
Most of the breakers in a panel will be 120 VAC. Double height breakers are 240 VAC. A triple height breaker probably indicates you have 3-phase power in the panel.
One breaker in the North American electrical system will supply 110 volts. Two adjacent tied breakers will produce 220 volts.
15000btu is the largest and that's a 115 volt basically the same ,you just need a higher breaker is all
A breaker is based on wire size, as the breaker protects the wire and not the load. This is a voltage drop question. A #3 copper conductor will limit the voltage drop to 3% or less when supplying 60 amps for 110 feet on a 110 volt system.
The job of a breaker is to limit the amount of current that is applied to the size of wire that is connected to the breaker.
if the nameplate says 120 volt, then yes. but might trip breaker if the circuit is overloaded and or only 15 amps
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There is a direct short after the switch.
~9.1 Amps P [W]= E [V] x I [A]
2.3 kw per hour on a 110-120 volt circuit.
If you are about to purchase a window unit, the answer depends on a few factors: 110/115/120 volt units are generally not available in the larger cooling capacity sizes. If you need to cool one average sized bedroom and have a 110 outlet near a window, this should do the trick, and you won't need an electrician to install new wires. If you need to cool an entire house, then you are going to need a 220/240 volt unit or multiple 110 volt units. If you are talking about a central system, then the furnas, or indoor section will most likely be 110 volt and the outdoor unit 220 and you will need to have it professionally installed anyway.
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Take out the double pole breaker, place the white wire on the grounding bar along with the ground wire, install singe pole breaker(size needed) attach black wire onto new breaker and you now have 110 line.