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A #3 copper conductor with an insulation factor of 90 degrees C is rated for 105 amps.
100A
If a 100 amp breaker keeps tripping there is an overload on the system.
I don't know anything about Minneapolis except that it's cold, but anything under 100 Amps is normally inadequate for an average home. Therefore, the service you mention is the bare minimum required for a home of less than 2,000 sf leaving little room for future consumption and the possibility of costs for upgrading to a larger service.
I've seen the service entering very old homes without updated wiring to be 120v/30A. This was in a very old home wired in 1946. Homes in the 60's were being wired 120V/240V with 100A-150A services. Homes in the late 70s and early 80s were being wired with 200A services. In a lot of cases, this was to accommodate the use of all-electric appliances, including baseboard heat and water heaters. A few months ago, I helped wire a house with 2-200A breaker panels, with a 100A sub-panel in the garage. I've also heard of new larger homes being wired for 400A, 800A, and more. The sky is definitely the limit. For branch circuits: the amp ratings are generally 15A, 20A, 30A, 40A, and 50A.
Have an electrician wire you a proper line for the appliance. You were just kidding about the 100A, right? 10, or 20amp, not 100.
this is pipe size dn100 ( Diametre Nominal 100) =100A
No because 100a-35 is an algebraic expression containing two terms.
A #3 copper conductor with an insulation factor of 90 degrees C is rated for 105 amps.
As many as you want without exceeding the 100amps. You could have 100 circuits if all you have is a single 100watt light on each circuit.
A 15000 KW transformer will power a small city! One KW is one thousand watts, so 15000 KW is 15,000,000 watts. The average 2500 ft2 house in the US uses somewhere between 24000 and 48000 watts maximum (thats a 100A or 200A service). Did you perhaps mean 15000 watts? That would correspond to a 60A service, which is pretty small. If you have gas appliances (stove, furnace, water heater, clothes dryer) and no big electrical appliances, such as an air conditioner, then maybe a 60A service would do. Most jurisdictions require a minimum 100A service these days except in unusual situations, such as mobile homes and such. A house that size should have a 200A 42 circuit panel. This relates to a 50Kva transformer
Mossberg
100A
It is 100A hundredths.
The Electric Company - 1971 100A 5-100 was released on: USA: 5 March 1976
I just removed a ALT 100A fuse in my buddy's Toyota Corolla from 93'. I had to disasemble the hole fusebox in the engineroom, to take the fuses out from beneath it. They are boltet on, (search google: "ALT 100A" first article). Hope this was helpfull. Rasmus DK.
Stevens.