I just used it to run my 50 amp electric stove. You can use it for a small sub-panel.
In a 6-30 3 prong female plug, there are two hot wires, which are usually black or red, and these connect to the two hot terminals. The neutral wire, typically white, connects to the neutral terminal, and the green wire, which is the ground wire, connects to the ground terminal.
A #6 copper wire with an insulation factor of 75 or 90 degrees C is rated at 65 amps.
If you need to ask, you shouldn't be doing it.
No you need at least a #6. Depending if it is a motor load it may even be higher that a #6. #10 wire is only reated at 30 amps. #8 wire is rated at 40 amps.
The NEMA 6-20R is a 2 pole 3 wire grounding receptacle that is rated for 250 volts. It is not meant to have a neutral wire connected to it. The receptacle is designed to have 240 volts connected to it.
# 6 wire
Nicky Wire is 6' 3".
6
The Wire - 2002 Homecoming 3-6 is rated/received certificates of: Netherlands:16
Use AWG #6 wire.
Use AWG # 6 wire.
In a 6-30 3 prong female plug, there are two hot wires, which are usually black or red, and these connect to the two hot terminals. The neutral wire, typically white, connects to the neutral terminal, and the green wire, which is the ground wire, connects to the ground terminal.
Use 6/3 Romex protected by a 60A breaker. You'll never miss the other 10A.
The Wire - 2002 All Prologue 2-6 is rated/received certificates of: Netherlands:16
The correct firing order is 5-2-3-6-4-1, the coil pack is number 1-2-3-4-5-6 so just connect the spark wire #5 to coil #1 wire #2 to coil #2 wire #3 to coil #3 wire #6 to coil #4 etc... it is NOT just 123456.
11 feet 6 inches
A 6 mm earth wire can be used to replace a 2.5 mm earth wire, but if there is an existing 6 mm earth wire it must be 6 mm all the way to the earth, and not replaced by a smaller wire between it and the earth connection.