14 gauge will handle it with a 15 amp breaker. If you use 12 gauge use a 20 amp breaker.
No. 20 amps at 120 volts will handle a maximum of 2400 watts. And you should never continuously load a 20 amp 120 volt circuit to no more than 1920 watts.
No more than 13 maximum on a 20 amp circuit.
depends on your load...
20 amp on a 12 volt system
It is not recommended. The wiring is made to handle 15 amp.
No. A 120 volt 15 amp service will handle a maximum of 1,800 watts. Even a 20 amp service will only handle 2400 watts and that is at max load which you should never load on a 20 amp circuit. You will need a 30 amp 120 volt or 240 volt service for 2400 watts.
No, you would need at least 20 amps. But the fuse must match the wiring. A 20 amp fuse will require the use of AWG # 12 wire.
It sounds to me like the exhaust timer is just a switch. The 20 amp rating that the timer is given is the maximum amount of current that it can handle and still be within its safety specifications. It will work very well on a 15 amp circuit.
14 gauge will handle it with a 15 amp breaker. If you use 12 gauge use a 20 amp breaker.
No. 20 amps at 120 volts will handle a maximum of 2400 watts. And you should never continuously load a 20 amp 120 volt circuit to no more than 1920 watts.
Handle a "What"?
The internal metal plates are heavier to handle the extra current. the plates are identical in size and thickness on the 2 i have takein apart,and all i can see is the extra slot on to 20 amp one. A 20 amp receptacle must be fed by #12 wire while #14 is good for a 15 amp. 20 amp cords should not fit into a 15 amp receptacle.
It's not the battery you have to worry about it is the alternator. it should handle an average amp and sub woofer.
2.3 kw per hour on a 110-120 volt circuit.
If the wire to the switch is AWG #12 you need a 20 amp switch because it is a 20 amp circuit.
Yes you can as long as it is feed off of a 20 amp circuit in at least #12 gauge wire.