Results 16 to 30 of 30
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19th December 2013, 05:12 PM #16
Yes Peter, there are good and bad in every jurisdiction - no one state has all the good or all the bad. Qld e.g. has the best petrol prices (of the eastern states anyway) but probably the worst environmental record as a whole, particularly in the 70s and 80s. They are even considering putting a coal loader near the Barrier Reef . Currently NSW appears to be the corruption champs from the previous administration.
Last edited by Bedford; 19th December 2013 at 08:28 PM. Reason: Off topic.
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19th December 2013, 05:58 PM #17GOLD MEMBER
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Brett! Settle! This is not the end of the world. You have a nice new machine and the ability to do things you couldn't do before. For what its worth, every industrial machine I have ever bought has come with a short bit of lead and no plug. I now expect it. Even second hand machine suppliers cut the plug off before delivery. I guess the only reason your machine had the short bit of cable was to show type and orientation.
Merry Christmas mate. Keep smiling.Last edited by Bedford; 19th December 2013 at 08:29 PM. Reason: Off topic.
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19th December 2013, 06:48 PM #18
Funny enough all my cheap & dicey tools have come with the longest leads (GMC etc.)
Just some thing I had noticed..
RegardsHugh
Enough is enough, more than enough is too much.
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19th December 2013, 09:18 PM #19
When I bought my 21" bandsaw from Carbatec it came with a long thick power lead AND NO PLUG. So I bought a 15 amp plug and fitted it. I can see why you are a bit annoyed about such a short lead though. As you said the cost of fitting a decent length of lead at the manufacturing stage is negligible and its easier to shorten it than lengthen it.
To the best of my knowledge, you dont need any qualification to LEGALLY work on anything that is not plugged in. However that does not mean that just anyone SHOULD do it.
Like many here I have done it often, as recently as last weekend, and since I start my 39-day holiday today (not gloating or anything ) I bet I do several more over the next few weeks.
If you know what you are doing, and exercise common sense it should all be good. An example I can cite for how not to do it was something I found at a house I once rented where the power lead connecting an external power point to an external hot water system with a power lead made out of the lead cut off an appliance joined to a power lead with the plug end cut off by twisting the wires and wrapping with sticky tape. The "joint" was dragging on the ground in a drain. Thats what I mean about common sense.
Cheers
DougI got sick of sitting around doing nothing - so I took up meditation.
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19th December 2013, 09:39 PM #20DISCLAIMER
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or moderators for advice offered by members posting replies
or asking questions regarding electrical work.
We strongly advise contacting a Licensed Tradeperson for all electrical work.WARNING
Information supplied within posts is not to be considered as detailed formal instructions to complete a task.
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19th December 2013, 10:17 PM #21
[QUOTE=FenceFurniture;1728361]Hmmm.
Unbelievable that a $5600 machine comes without .....
(all 20 amp, so not cheap)
QUOTE]
Is it such a straightforward job? I don't know anything about your setup or situation but a $5600 seems to be an industrial capacity and not a hobbyists machine & seems to be a little outside the straight forward if it requires 20A plugs..
What power is it?
What current will it draw on startup, under load?
Do the circuits in your shed have the capacity for the load & any combined ancillary load? i.e. dust extraction.
Make sure you set yourself up safely so you can get many years of enjoyment from it rather than have one shocking experience.
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19th December 2013, 11:58 PM #22
It's rated as 3000w, 230 volts (so 13A), but also states 19.8A, so that would be the startup draw. Yes I have two 20A circuits installed - one is dedicated to the thicky, and the other for everything else.
The thread on it is here.
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20th December 2013, 04:52 PM #23
Short Lead
Is it possible the short lead is provided so it can be wired first to an emergency stop on the floor?
As has been mentioned many machines are hard wired.
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20th December 2013, 05:39 PM #24
They don't seem to know. All the other machines in the brand have some sort of decent length.
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20th December 2013, 06:06 PM #25
So you wouldn't "plug" the brand or supplier?
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20th December 2013, 08:28 PM #26
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20th December 2013, 09:27 PM #27
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20th December 2013, 11:13 PM #28GOLD MEMBER
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Having just bought a Felder slider I can say that every single person who does the install themselves has issues which most take in their stride and get on with it. The overall problem came to a head when Felder decided to get serious in the North American market and the Yanks started complaining about the instructions or lack of them. What you receive is a book that is fairly forgettable and for every custom specification a sheet of drawings is included which are not instructions and by any stretch cannot be called instructions. To pacify the Yanks Felder produced some Youtube videos on the slider but it still has large black holes in it depending on the model.
Why is it so? Apparently it is very unusual in Europe for a machine not to be installed by the factory and they don't need instructions. As for the electrical connection I have now seen three totally different problems on recently delivered machines. Felder will deliver and install and commission any machine bought from them and leave that option to each customer. The fact that I chose to not take up the offer was my choice but i do expect a machine to have adequate docs and the electrical connection to be compliant to the market it is delivered into. It was pointed out to me more than once that the electrical connection was to be done by an electrician and I was always aware of that.CHRIS
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20th December 2013, 11:47 PM #29
Interesting Chris. He was busily telling me that they were not allowed to fit plugs (and ipso facto longer leads). He didn't have much to say when I asked him how they handle warranty repairs of an electrical nature.
So do they send a Sparky out to do the install? I think not. Just a matter of saying whatever is convenient at the time.
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21st December 2013, 12:16 AM #30GOLD MEMBER
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I never went into the details as they did not concern me. Mine had a very short lead and a Euro DIN plug on it as they run the machine as part of QC. Maybe it just missed getting the plug removed but I know of another delivered with the Euro plug. Mine was three phase and required 10 metres of lead and a plug I already had. They had to get right back into the machine connector box to connect, $110 for the sparky.
CHRIS
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