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Why do you see 20A Breaker, #12 wire and 15A receptacal?

5K views 10 replies 7 participants last post by  Andy in ATL 
#1 ·
Can someone explain this to me? In a room in my house there is a 20A circuit breaker. The room is wired with #12 wire but the receptacals are 15A. Shouldn't they be 20A receptacals? Any info would be appreciated.
 
#2 ·
This is an often discussed subject.

In the US the code allows the use of 15A receptacles on 20 amp circuits as long as there is more than one receptacle on that circuit.
For clarity, a duplex receptacles is considered two receptacles.

Canada has a different code on this.
 
#3 · (Edited)
This is an often discussed subject.
Very often- And conversely- if a SINGLE outlet is used in a dedicated situation, it must be rated for 20a as long as it is the only outlet on that 20a circuit.

Another thought- it is also what size breaker that matters too- you can have 12g wire being powered by a 15a breaker which I believe would be acceptable.

Lastly, it is highly unlikely that you would have a 20a load on a residential outlet- refrigerators and window air conditioners (relatively large items) don't usually have that amount of draw.
 
#5 ·
No. A 15A duplex is rated for 15a EACH...theoretically.
The internals ARE rated for 20 amps.

Like I said in another thread. Receptacles generally don't "go out" unless there are seriously wrong factors involved.
 
#6 ·
Very few contractors including myself will go to the expense of installing 20 amp recepts in a residential setting. Most will use the inexpensive 15 amp on the 20 amp circuits with the exception of dedicated circuits as mentioned above. Check the price of both and you will see why.
 
#7 ·
Not only that, but if a tool or appliance actually has a 20A plug on it, which would require a 20A receptacle, it would almost certainly require a dedicated circuit.
These are extremely rare in a residence. If something has/is that big of a load it would likely be 240v.

Why Canada requires 20A devices is beyond me.
 
#8 ·
Just to add to the confusion, Australian power cabling (for domestic purposes) is 2.5mm squared (don't ask me about this nonmetric "gauge" thing). This size covers up to 20 Amps (at 240 volts) so therefore the circuit breaker protecting this cable can be no larger than 20 Amps. In other words, the circuit breaker only protects the cable. The switchgear is generally underrated & is therefore also covered by the quick action of a circuit breaker.

I do believe that this is the case in North America. Somebody please correct me if I am wrong.
 
#11 ·
Hey my gorilla like brother,

Thanks for the respone to the "Shepard of the hills". Very cool.

I bet if you sent HB a PM and were sweet she might consider sending her likeness to you. It is breathtaking for sure. You have to be respectful, though. HB is my sweetheart.

Andy in the big ATL
 
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