2 x 220 amp's installed here, although 2x20amp 220v would have worked.You guys using 2 - 220 30 amps?
Also can I get a picture of both cords (printer and heater) to show my electrician. Thanks.
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I too looked at UPS protection, was costly af. My elec guy put in a surge protector that would protect the printer from any spikes, which was good enough for me.My electrician is charging me 1000 to install a bigger panel in my breaker box ( I'm already full) a separate, dedicated line from the box to the printer with 2 220v30amps
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There is a site preparation guide available to download on the HP Website. Search for Latex 570, click on "manuals". No UPS is neccessary, and very expensive too for the power consumption of a 570
My argument. However, the previous owners ran their Roland off a huge UPS. The new owner learned everything she knows about signs from them so she has all of their habits, good and bad.
We have all the electrical in place. I thought the point of the breakers was to trip should the machine end up drawing more than 20amps. Wouldn't that include a large electrical spike, say a lightning strike to the buildings electrical? (Their go to example)
As old as this building is, if it gets hit by lightning I'd be more worried about fire than a burning up a fairly modern machine. One that faults its self if you **** too close to it.
EDIT: The censored word is "F-A-R-T" :'D
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This. The point of using the correct breakers here is to trip if something should surge or draw too much.
Yes! Your circuit breaker should be no more than 25% greater than your maximum load. In the latex the draw is asymmetrical so on the computer side max load is 4amps and on the heater it's 12amps so technically you need a 5amp and 15amp breaker or 1 20amp breaker and a branched circuit. You don't need seperating breakers for each line as this printer won't turn on of one power circuit goes down.So does that mean a 30 amp will do more harm then good? And my electrician explained that if a big surge comes thru the building, the meter box should ground it. But we've been having alot of power outages lately with the rain in Miami, so I'm having the buildings meter room checked incase the ground isn't set up right.
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Yes! Your circuit breaker should be no more than 25% greater than your maximum load. In the latex the draw is asymmetrical so on the computer side max load is 4amps and on the heater it's 12amps so technically you need a 5amp and 15amp breaker or 1 20amp breaker and a branched circuit. You don't need seperating breakers for each line as this printer won't turn on of one power circuit goes down.