Yes if that is all that is on that circuit.
A 10-amp circuit would have adequate capacity, however, if the gas range has electric ignition, it could cause voltage spikes that are detrimental to sensitive electronics. I'm not sure on the ignitors, but I know compressors and motors should not be on the same line as electronics.
yes ofcourse they both are the same
If you are talking about a plug rated at 20 A and not that the device it is attached to as drawing 20 A then nothing will happen unless the device along with other devices on the same circuit trip the breaker. The rating of 20 A on a plug tells you the maximum current that should go through the plug. The 15 A breaker protecting the outlet ensures that no more than 15 A can go through your 20A plug.
That is potentially dangerous and should never be done. See an electrician about this problem.
A flex outlet is a wall outlet which has a flexible cable permanently wired into it instead of being fitted with a plug to go into a socket outlet. Flex outlets have their own fuse holder to replace the fuse which would normally be fitted into the plug if a fused plug were used instead. Such fused flex outlets are commonly used for electrical appliances which will never be moved, such as immersion heaters, which are permanently installed into domestic hot water storage tanks, and hot water heaters which are wall-mounted. A spur outlet is an additional wall outlet that is permanently connected to another wall outlet instead of being wired directly back to the breaker panel on its own circuit. Spur outlets are used occasionally when most socket outlets in a building are installed on a "ring main" and for some reason - usually because of cost when an additional socket outlet is found to be needed at a new point in the building - it was decided not to extend the ring main itself to that point in the building. A "ring main" is a loop of cable that goes out from a breaker to feed a "ring" of socket outlets in part of a building and then returns to be connected back to the same breaker. For instance in an average-sized house 3 ring mains would normally be installed: one for the socket outlets in the kitchen, one for the rest of the ground floor and the third for the bedroom floor. This method is used extensively in the UK and Eire where every appliance has its own correctly-fused plug.
Hello. While I do not have an answer for you, I am currently seeking the same. I would like to plug two kilns into one outlet, though certainly not to fire both at once, as each kiln should run on it's own circuit. Rather I would like to eliminate the need to unplug one and then plug in the other in order to fire twice in one day. I'll keep looking, and hope to have an answer for both of us. :-)
You get a Splitter
The Wires are of different lengths. the shorter cable will connect to the closest plug and the longer cable to the outer plug. technically since they both run off the same coil they will ignite at the same time.
No you can not you will need to replace the plug with a 4 prong the same as the style of your oven and change your breaker to the correct Amp for your style of 4 prong plug
yes ofcourse they both are the same
The Droid comes with its own USB cable. It plugs into the same port on the phone as the charger.
Most printers are easy. First plug the power cord into an outlet and into the printer. Second, plug the data cable into the hard drive or usb port. Third, either run the software for your computer to install it and set it to defualt or it will identify it automatically and yhe same steps apply.
If your phone system is a PBX then yes you can plug it on the same outlet where a UPS is plugged. You can even plug your PBX system to the UPS so when there's a power failure you can still have few minutes source to power your phone system.
Yes it may be the same as the 12 Volt outlet it is on some of the fords.
They do not plug into a phone jack as the ethernet plug looks the same, but is larger. They should slip right in to the right connection spot and have a clip like thing that you push to remove them, just like a phone jack cable has.
if you mean the plug which you insert into an electrical socket, then you just pull it out. the same goes for the cable which is inserted into the camera
I had the same problem and solved it: just unplug the power cable. Then while pressing the INPUT & VOL - buttons on the tv, plug the power cable back into the outlet (with your other hand) . When it powers up keep pressing the INPUT & VOL - after just a few seconds you will see
If it blows every time you plug in the same component, the component is bad.