You can't wire 2 beedrooms on one breaker.
A 2 bedroom house in the US can be any price depending on the way its set up or built. If it is a big 2 bedroom house with a large kitchen and large bathroom chances are it will be more than a 2 bedroom house with a small kitchen and small bathroom
A line can be leased as either a 2-wire (1-pair) line or a 4-wire (2-pair) line. A 2-pair line uses 1 pair to transmit and 1 pair to receive. With a 1-pair line, you transmit and receive over the same pair of wires.
If you are trying to read a map, there is MOST LIKELY a scale factor (i.e. 1 inch=2.5 miles. You could also use it in blueprints, like if you want to rearrange you bedroom. You can't fit your bedroom on a piece of computer paper! So you may use a scale factor for that (i.e. 1/2 in.= 1 foot).
Yes. The load capacity of 12-2 is higher.
Yes, but the answer is how many beds you have= 1 bed not enough room. 2 beds a little room. 3 beds ok. 4 beds enough room. someone might endup sleeping on the floor!
Use a 30 amp breaker.
The breaker you use is determined by the size of the wire in the wall not by what is being connected to that circuit. If you have 14/2 wire then use a 15 amp breaker. If you have 12/2 wire then use a 20 amp breaker. The breaker protects the wiring not the item connected.
The breaker you use is determined by the size of the wire in the wall not by what is being connected to that circuit. If you have 14/2 wire then use a 15 amp breaker. If you have 12/2 wire then use a 20 amp breaker. The breaker protects the wiring not the item connected.
Black. wire goes to breaker, white wire goes to neutral bar, and copper wire goes to ground bar.
4 wires. 2 hot legs, 1 neutral leg, and 1 ground wire.
It is not the number of bulbs that you worry about. It is the wire size that is your concern. If the circuit is wired with AWG 12/2 wire then use a 20 amp breaker. If it is wired with a AWG 14/2 wire then use a 15 amp breaker. You are protecting the wiring with the correct size breaker.
For a 100 Amp breaker panel it would be 2 AWG. For 150 Amps it would require 2/0 (2 ought) aluminum wire.
The term "double pole" usually means a breaker with 2 handles that attaches in the space as a normal single pole breaker. If this is what you mean, no, you cannot. There is no potential, or voltage, between the wire terminals. If by "double pole" you mean what is usually called a 2-pole breaker, which is a breaker with 2 handles that attaches in the space of 2 single pole breakers, then yes, you can use this breaker and 12/2 wire to produce a 220v circuit.
The size breaker you use is determined by the size wire used in the circuit. If you use AWG #12/2 wire then use a 20 amp breaker. If you use AWG # 14/2 then use a 15 amp breaker.
Yes the wire size is larger for that size breaker but will not effect the 30 amp breaker protection of that circuit.
Not unless the wire going to the refrigerator outlet is AWG 10/2. If it is wired with 12/2 wire then you must use a 20 amp breaker. Using a 30 amp breaker is dangerous and a fire hazard.
running wire 12-2 300ft w/9ea. 27watt lights what size breaker should be used