Acme Electric- Buck Boost Transformers- FIGURE BB WIRING DEMO

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  • Опубликовано: 28 ноя 2018
  • Acme Electric- Multiple Buck Boost wiring demonstration. This demo aligns with figure BB in the Buck Boost Transformer section of our Acme Electric catalog.
  • ХоббиХобби

Комментарии • 12

  • @DanielLindaBrian
    @DanielLindaBrian 4 года назад +3

    That was some fucked up explanation !!!!!!!

  • @jab376
    @jab376 7 месяцев назад

    She didn't even tell viewers what buck boosting means. She assumes everyone one watching is an electrician. Dang!

  • @MEGAONE302
    @MEGAONE302 5 месяцев назад +1

    She doesn't even know what she's doing!

  • @StandardMan0
    @StandardMan0 3 года назад +3

    It’s ILLEGAL to use a green-jacket wire on A.N.Y.T.H.I.N.G.but an Earth Ground. There are NO exceptions. Doing this makes I and a thousand electricians distrust your product.

    • @jessecampsey718
      @jessecampsey718 3 года назад

      Entire reason i clicked on the video was because i saw that

    • @anyutubenamesleft
      @anyutubenamesleft 3 года назад

      Your statement would be incorrect. If it is less than 50v see below.
      Grounding of green wires
      Section 250.119 of the 2017 NEC has a long-standing requirement that identifies the green wires in a cable as ground wires. This was obviously written with power cables in mind. There is an exception for communications, Class 2, Class 3 and power-limited fire alarm cables operating at less than 50 volts. That exception is clearly inadequate because many communications, Class 2, Class 3 and power-limited fire alarm circuits operate above 50 volts.
      In the 2020 NEC, the 50 volt exception in 250.119 has been changed to be 50 volts AC or 60 volts DC in order to accommodate PoE. Recognizing 60 volt DC circuits is a step in the right direction but still inadequate because it does not encompass all Class 2, Class 3 circuits permitted in Tables 11(A), 11(B) in Chapter 9, and all power-limited fire alarm circuits permitted by Tables 12(A) and 12(B) in Chapter 9.
      In the 2020 NEC, the new Section 725.3(P) for Class 2 and Class 3 cables, and new Section 760.3(O) for power-limited fire alarm cables, permit green wires to be used ungrounded without the voltage limitations in Section 250.119.
      Code Organization, Section 90.3 permits Chapters 5 through 7 to supplement or modify the requirements of Chapters 1 through 7; consequently, the requirements of 725.3(P) and 760.3(O) override the requirements of Section 250.119. Section 90.3 also exempts Chapter 8 from the requirements of Chapters 1 through 7 unless specifically referenced in Chapter 8. Consequently, Section 250.119 does not apply to communications circuits because that section is not referenced in Chapter 8.

    • @StandardMan0
      @StandardMan0 3 года назад

      Blah, blah, BLAH. Legal or not, if you put energy through a green jacketed wire, you’re an IDIOT. It is possible to be dead right.

    • @anyutubenamesleft
      @anyutubenamesleft 3 года назад

      @@StandardMan0 you have no idea what you are talking about. It's done lots of time in cables and other things. You may not like it but it's not illegal. You are thinking power cables. Trying to discount the manufacture you should understand what you are saying first

    • @RobiBue
      @RobiBue 2 года назад

      @@anyutubenamesleft while what you’re saying is not incorrect, the video clearly does not imply DC (since it’s a transformer connection) nor is it legal to run the same color for different phases, and clearly this is portrayed in this video. And running green wire here, is definitely not being used neither as signal wire nor for any of the 2017 NEC 250.119 exeptions.
      Of course unless you live in China or Russia… but then the NEC code doesn’t apply anyway ;) they have their own “code”