The equipment specs may require a dedicated circuit.
I am building a wood shop and have a table saw and dust collector. They are 110/220. I will be wiring them for 220. They pull 13 amps each at 110 and 6.5 at 220. Together at 220 they will pull 13 amps.
A lot of people say they should both be on their own dedicated circuit. What is the benefit? Why not just put them both on one 20 amp 220 circuit as combined they will be far below 80% of the 20 amp draw?
Unless there is some benefit I would rather run one line and save space in the box and only use one double pole breaker.
I was considering running a sub panel but decided against it. I actually have a spare panel I could use with the breakers in it. Previous owner was an electrician and he left a lot of stuff in garageMore for the sake of future expansion and your mention of saving space in the box (panel) I would recommend running an 8-3 gauge or 6-3 gauge cable for 40 or 55 amps respectively. You can avoid installing a subpanel in the shop now provided you use at most a 20 amp (double) breaker back at the panel.
Usually the tool instructions for any one tool won't call for a breaker less than 20 amps. What you need to be aware of is startup amps. The breaker will take a few seconds of a little over 20 amps without tripping. But if one tool draws over 20 amps all by itself for that few seconds, having the other already running at its 6-1/2 amps may be enough to trip the breaker immediately.
You are correct.While working on the wiring i Just began to question why you would use 2 20 amp circuits over 1 30 or 40amp circuit. My GUESS was that using a table saw that drew 7 amps you would have little protection for the machine. In other words a 40 amp breaker would let a lot of amperage go through the machine before the breaker cut off. A 20 amp would trip sooner with less amperage hopefully not causing damage to the machine.