Preston,
This would work fine. What you would basically end up with is a pair of
outlets on breakers that you would use when normal power is available.
When power goes out you can either run extension cords from the
generator to the plugs that you remove from the outlets, or run one
extension cord and split the power where the furnace and pump plug
in.The wire would have to be heavy enough to support both pump and
furnace at the same time...as would the generator.
I would cut the wire between the breakers and switches. I would have to
look at the electrical code book, but as I recall furnaces require a
disconnect at the furnace. I don't remember if an outlet with pigtail
qualifies. I've always hard wired my furnaces with a switch in line,
right where the romex comes out of the wall.
Karl: There would be no possibility of shock at the plugs, just as there
is no possibility of getting shocked when touching the plug on an
appliance. Power into that piece of wire would be through the plug that
is now not connected to a power source.
Peace,
Pat
Thusly spake Karl Vacek:
>
> You may want to rethink the male plug aspect. When the circuit is
> normally powered, the prongs of that male plug will be hot.
>
> How about adding a receptacle to serve the pump and then when the
> power goes off you can unplpug the pump from the house circuit and
> plug it into an extension cord to your generator ??
>
> Happy New Year !!
>
> Karl
>
>
>> I propose cutting each circuit between the breaker and switch, and
>> installing a suitably rated three prong female plug on the breaker
>> side of the cut and a three prong male plug on the switch side of the
>> cut. This would give me the ability, during power outages, to kill
>> the breaker, unplug the device, and then plug it into a 12/3
>> extension cord running from my generator
>
>
--
Pat Horne, Owner, Horne Systems
(512) 797-7501 Voice 5026 FM 2001
Pat@HorneSystemsTx.com Lockhart, TX 78644-4443
-- We support Habitat for Humanity - a hand UP, not a hand OUT --
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