240v single pole?

Users who are viewing this thread

Hids2000

New Member
Messages
63
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Location
Belleville NJ
Website
www.hidfoglight.com
first did something happen to the forum I can't search any post past june of this year. where did all the old posts go?

ok so i am adding an programmable thermostat to my 240v baseboard heaters.
i am looking at the user guide http://www.aubetech.com/manuel/2/TH106.pdf
and it is calling for 2 wires only.

So one wire is hot and one is neutral i assume. But i have no idea how to get 240v out of one single wire.

I always used a double pole breaker and use a 12-3 wire to get 240v. but i got no idea how to get 12-2 to carry 240v. any suggestion? is there such of breaker that is 240 single pole?
 
R

Rancher

Guest
What the diagram is depicting is that the thermostat is just a switch, it breaks only one side of the power going to the heater. The circle with the squiggle thru it is your power source, either 120 or 240, i.e. it only breaks one side of the 240 volt power, there is no neutral.

Rancher
 

Hids2000

New Member
Messages
63
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Location
Belleville NJ
Website
www.hidfoglight.com
Rancher said:
What the diagram is depicting is that the thermostat is just a switch, it breaks only one side of the power going to the heater. The circle with the squiggle thru it is your power source, either 120 or 240, i.e. it only breaks one side of the 240 volt power, there is no neutral.

Rancher


I am sorry. I just can't picture it in my mind. Out of the double pole 20 amp breaker i got 3 wires coming out correct? 2 of them are hot, let's say color black and red. the third wire is the ground. But on the back of the thermostat only got 2 wires.
So let us say I connect one of the hot wire (black) and ground to the thermostat than to the heater. Do i than connect the other hot wire (red) directly to the heater??
 
Last edited:

Jadnashua

Retired Defense Industry Engineer xxx
Messages
32,771
Reaction score
1,191
Points
113
Location
New England
On a typical 240vac breaker, there are two hots and the ground (no neutral) comes off of the bus. A stove or dryer may need a neutral because they want 120vac. Your heater doesn't typically need a neutral, so 12/2 is probably all you want (the second value is the number of load carrying conductors, they don't count the ground which is extra). On any circuit, it needs to be complete round trip to work. On a 240vac home circuit, that just means two hot leads from the opposite sides of the supply transformer feeding the power to the house. Neutral is half-way between those two, which gives you 120vac if you tap it off there.

If your thermostat can handle the current from a 240vac circuit, you only need to run one wire through it to break the total connection. This means that there is still voltage in the heater, but it can't go anywhere because one half has a switch (the thermostat) breaking the path. I think it is nicer to break both hots, but functionally, it works the same either way. Just make sure to turn the CB off if you want to do work, since there is still power going to the heater, even when the thermostat is off. If you find a path to ground, it will fry you.
 

Geniescience

Homeowner
Messages
2,137
Reaction score
4
Points
0
Location
humid summers hot, humid winters cold
think open circuit. When an circuit isn't working, it's only because a conducting wire is cut. Only one wire, if cut, makes the circuit go dead.

The thermostat cuts the circuit by opening one of the wires. A single wire. The same wire, cut at one place; insert thermostat and voilà circuit works again. Thermostat makes closed cicuit. One wire only. Same color in and out. Assuming i understood it like it should be understood.

David
 

JWelectric

Electrical Contractor/Instructor
Messages
2,608
Reaction score
21
Points
38
Location
North Carolina
First you need to learn that not every white wire is a neutral and not every neutral is a white wire.

From a 240 volt breaker comes two conductors of what ever color I choose. It can be one black and one white as no neutral is needed for baseboard heat.

200.7(C) of the NEC requires that if I choose to use the white wire as part of a 240 volt circuit I must re-identify it be marking it as a different color.

If you have already installed three conductor cable just disregard the white conductor.

The thermostat needs to break only one of the conductors supplying the heater as the diagram shows.

If you are not able to read the diagram and install the thermostat then you need to seek help from some in you area.
 

Jimbo

Plumber
Messages
8,918
Reaction score
18
Points
0
Location
San Diego, CA
hids2000 said:
first did something happen to the forum I can't search any post past june of this year. where did all the old posts go?

?

Unfortunately, something did happen to the bulletin board. It's a long story! Let's just let it go at that!
 

Hids2000

New Member
Messages
63
Reaction score
0
Points
0
Location
Belleville NJ
Website
www.hidfoglight.com
I got a hold a buddy of my and I understand it fully now. My problem is I work with DC all the time so I am always thinking + goes to - and in my mind I didn't understand how a 240AC since both are hot (in my mind +) can work without a return (-). And I totally forgot that AC switches from + to - back and forth. Now I understand the drawing and how to run the wires to the heater.
Thanks everyone for their support and help.
 

Jimbo

Plumber
Messages
8,918
Reaction score
18
Points
0
Location
San Diego, CA
hids2000 said:
So one wire is hot and one is neutral i assume. breaker ?

NO. I see the device is Canadian. I don't know if you are in Canada.

In the US a pure 240 volt cirvcuit, as you have typically on a baseboard heater, would NOT have a neutral. The two wires are the 2 hot wires.

It is preferred to switch both leads of 240, but your local inspector may allow this thermostat, which only switches one lead.
 

Leejosepho

DIY scratch-pad engineer
Messages
2,483
Reaction score
0
Points
36
Location
200 miles south of Little Rock
Website
www.nonameyet.org
hids2000 said:
I just can't picture it in my mind ...

Here you go, and the ground wire goes directly and only to the heater.
 

Attachments

  • circuit.jpg
    circuit.jpg
    9.3 KB · Views: 1,840
Last edited:

Abikerboy

DIY Senior Member
Messages
202
Reaction score
1
Points
0
Location
VA
hids2000 said:
I got a hold a buddy of my and I understand it fully now. My problem is I work with DC all the time so I am always thinking + goes to - and in my mind I didn't understand how a 240AC since both are hot (in my mind +) can work without a return (-). And I totally forgot that AC switches from + to - back and forth. Now I understand the drawing and how to run the wires to the heater.
Thanks everyone for their support and help.

If you work with dc current, forget the ground completely, and relate an ac circuit to your dc 2 cell flashlight, and then imagine it this way...as the batteries running your flashlight! A flashlight battery is 1.5 volt. The bulb in a 2 cell flashlight is 3 volt. Stack two batteries in a flashlight, and measure from the bottom of the lower battery to the top of the upper battery (where the bulb is) and you get 3 volts. Now, leaving one lead at the bottom (or the top), stick the other lead in between the two batteries, and you get 1.5 volt. It works exactly the same. The two "top" leads (the hot leads) bring 240 into your house, while the center lead (the neutral tap of the power companies transformer) in combination with either of the other two leads will bring you 120. Just like the switch in your flashlight, the thermostat switch will break one of these "top" or "bottom" leads, and your heater is off. Again, just like your flashlight, the center tap, or neutral, wont really matter. As for the ground on an ac circuit, ground just attaches to the housing, just in case there is a short, or bare wire somewhere. As for the relation between ac and dc, with dc, there is a plus and a minus...with ac, the plus and minus reverses itself 60 times a second, so for one instant, one lead is a plus, and the next instant, this lead becomes a minus, and the other lead becomes the plus.
 
Last edited:

bucknljake

New Member
Messages
1
Reaction score
0
Points
0
I'm sure you probably already have it in by this point, but If you are doing any new work that has to be code inspected, you may want to call your local code office and double check that a single pole thermostat is ok. I discovered (well after I already bought them for a basement finishing project) that they require double pole Thermostats for 240V heaters. I'm not sure if this is a national standard code thing or just local but he did say it was a recent change.
I personally don't see why you have to have both poles cut... a broken circuit is a broken circuit whether you cut one pole or both correct ?
 

Leejosepho

DIY scratch-pad engineer
Messages
2,483
Reaction score
0
Points
36
Location
200 miles south of Little Rock
Website
www.nonameyet.org
bucknljake said:
I personally don't see why you have to have both poles cut... a broken circuit is a broken circuit whether you cut one pole or both correct ?

Yes, a broken circuit is a broken circuit, but one hot leg could still produce a shocking experience if someone did something out of the norm either to, with or near the heater while believing "off" was truly off.
 

Speedy Petey

Licensed Electrical Contractor
Messages
1,108
Reaction score
9
Points
38
Location
NY State, USA
leejosepho said:
......while believing "off" was truly off.
"Believing" is NOT a safe word. If you get hit because you "thought" the circuit was off it is your OWN fault. This is Ele. 101.
 

Leejosepho

DIY scratch-pad engineer
Messages
2,483
Reaction score
0
Points
36
Location
200 miles south of Little Rock
Website
www.nonameyet.org
Speedy Petey said:
"Believing" is NOT a safe word.

Yes, mere belief never makes *anything* actually true.

Speedy Petey said:
If you get hit because you "thought" the circuit was off it is your OWN fault. This is Ele. 101.

Not necessarily. A janitor or anyone else with a bucket of water for cleaning a baseboard heater might reasonably assume it is "off" simply because the thermostat knob, display or other indicator says it is ... and at that point, the individual who installed the single-pole thermostat would be the culpable one after that bucket got spilled onto the business end of that heater.
 

Speedy Petey

Licensed Electrical Contractor
Messages
1,108
Reaction score
9
Points
38
Location
NY State, USA
If you are cleaning an electric baseboard heater with a bucket of water you deserve a shock anyway. :p

Seriously, water merely spilling on a baseboard heater will NOT cause a shock. The element is sealed and wiring is in a wiring compartment. Even if the wiring does get wet it will not energize the whole unit.

If the scenario you describe did happen, the manufacturer of the unit would be at fault, not the installer.
At the same time, this scenario could happen to literally dozens of other electrical items.
Just because the heater is 240v does not make it that much more dangerous. People think the get shocked with 240v, when in reality they are hit with 120v. It is HIGHLY unlikely that someone would touch BOTH hot wires, at the same time, while remaining ungrounded.
 

Leejosepho

DIY scratch-pad engineer
Messages
2,483
Reaction score
0
Points
36
Location
200 miles south of Little Rock
Website
www.nonameyet.org
Speedy Petey said:
... water merely spilling on a baseboard heater will NOT cause a shock. The element is sealed and wiring is in a wiring compartment. Even if the wiring does get wet it will not energize the whole unit.

No big argument there, yet there must be some reason for double-pole controls being preferable ...
 
Top
Hey, wait a minute.

This is awkward, but...

It looks like you're using an ad blocker. We get it, but (1) terrylove.com can't live without ads, and (2) ad blockers can cause issues with videos and comments. If you'd like to support the site, please allow ads.

If any particular ad is your REASON for blocking ads, please let us know. We might be able to do something about it. Thanks.
I've Disabled AdBlock    No Thanks