hey crew
can anyone identify the name/spec of this plug and receptacle
there are apparently a ton of standards for industrial locking plugs, none of which look like this on amazon
hey crew
can anyone identify the name/spec of this plug and receptacle
there are apparently a ton of standards for industrial locking plugs, none of which look like this on amazon
the receptacle
thanks
top view of plug
Twist lock plug. They come in lots of shapes and configurations, but that's what they're called.
I know this I am looking for the specific one in the picture
It's usually stamped on it somewhere. I can't read the markings in the potato quality photos.
write the words on the plug in israelitegle. add the words twist lock. profit. use the profits to buy lessons on how to use a fricking camera, homosexual.
it looks like a hubble 30 amp but who knows with all the jizz on the lense.
it's definitely 20a not 30a
Turnlok 20 Amp 120/208-Volt Non-NEMA, it says right on it.
Gr8 b8 m8, 8/8 no h8.
thanks
/thread
Have fun burning your house down.
it's not a house i got an old machine that somebody cut the plug off of
Whatever it is, if your not trolling and are honestly too stupid to read whats stamped on the plug you have no business wiring said plug. At least make a thread after about what burns down/ blows up.
I searched what was on the plug and got varied results, hence the thread. Thanks for doing the legwork guy
it says exactly what it is in the first picture, there is no legwork to be done besides reading
not turnlok and non-nema or whatever
>Non-NEMA
Where does that even come from?
It's a 240v plug for a clothes dryer. Goddamn you people are dense.
it's not though
>It's a 240v plug for a clothes dryer. Goddamn you people are dense.
if you only knew the truth here....
It's an L18-20 plug. 20 amp, 3 phase, 120/208V (because you're using three phases, 3 poles and a neutral. 120/208 because you're 120V between any pole and ground, and 208V between any two poles.
W have one o those on our wheel balancer.
It's 3 phase so 3 120's and a ground.
Technically it's a neutral - you can bias it if your 120 (or 208) isn't quite up to snuff, and as long as that's done to code, it's all good. But yeah, it's designed to use a grounded neutral.