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View Full Version : Which extension cord?



RandyD
06-21-2014, 08:05 PM
I have a Griot's D/A polisher and will be working on my sons car when I visit him. He lives in an apartment which has a balcony on the first floor with an outlet. If I get a 50-100 Ft extension cord I will be able to use the Griot's in his outdoor parking lot. Question is will a light or general use cord from Husky for about $16 in Home Depot do it or will I need to spend $50 or $ 60 on their heavy duty extension cord.

Coopers ST
06-21-2014, 08:47 PM
If I was doing it I would spend the extra money and the the heavy duty one. Electricity is not something do mess with. The cord could get hot enough with the time and draw a DA pulls. It could start a fire. Then the extra $30 wouldn't be much money. This is coming from a guy who is cheap and would gladly save a buck when I can. Some placed you just can't.

davidc
06-21-2014, 08:52 PM
I have a Griot's D/A polisher and will be working on my sons car when I visit him. He lives in an apartment which has a balcony on the first floor with an outlet. If I get a 50-100 Ft extension cord I will be able to use the Griot's in his outdoor parking lot. Question is will a light or general use cord from Husky for about $16 in Home Depot do it or will I need to spend $50 or $ 60 on their heavy duty extension cord.

The garden variety cord is 16 gauge. For 50-100 foot I would lean towards 12 gauge to keep voltage drop to a minimum which will help your DA running cooler and prolong it's life. If 12 is hard to find 14 is better than the garden variety.

Dave

RandyD
06-21-2014, 08:52 PM
Thanks! Did some more research and I will get a quality 12 gauge 50 foot for about $50.00.

JHL88
06-21-2014, 09:22 PM
Yeah, get at least a 50 foot 12 gauge.

Mountian man
06-21-2014, 09:44 PM
Do not get the light weight one as it is most likely a 14 or 16 ga. wire
A 14 gauge cord is only good for 15 amp and if you are going to run out to a hundred feet you will lose about 5% in voltage and amperage.
You should never use more than 80% of the ampissaity of the cord. You need to go to a 12 gauge wire, it is rated for 20 amps. You may want to go to your local electrical wholesale house and get a 100 ft. Of 12-2-SO or SJO cord and a contractor spec grade male and female plugs. If you decide to go this route your tools will never starve for voltage and amps thus no heat build up in cord or tool and they will perform as they were intended.
Sorry for the long reply but as a electrician by trade I want you and anyone else to be safe when it comes to electrical. Don't but the crap at Home Depot, lowes,etc . You will get a superior quality cord for the money at the wholesale house.

inDetail
06-21-2014, 09:48 PM
Check and see what the GG manual says. It should give you the AWG for each length of cord. I use a 16 gauge 25 ft. You just want to make sure that the outlet is putting out consistent current.
I have that issue with one of my outdoor outlets and the DA performance is noticeable.

ducksfan
06-21-2014, 10:06 PM
16g works for a light.

For a motor:
14g 25'
12g 50'
10g 100'

This covers almost anything a detailer (construction worker) will do with hand or small portable tools.

Bunky
06-22-2014, 05:09 AM
A 12 AWG will power anything now and later from a standard 15/20A outlet. Invest for later.

BobbyG
06-22-2014, 05:17 AM
Do not get the light weight one as it is most likely a 14 or 16 ga. wire
A 14 gauge cord is only good for 15 amp and if you are going to run out to a hundred feet you will lose about 5% in voltage and amperage.
You should never use more than 80% of the ampissaity of the cord. You need to go to a 12 gauge wire, it is rated for 20 amps. You may want to go to your local electrical wholesale house and get a 100 ft. Of 12-2-SO or SJO cord and a contractor spec grade male and female plugs. If you decide to go this route your tools will never starve for voltage and amps thus no heat build up in cord or tool and they will perform as they were intended.
Sorry for the long reply but as a electrician by trade I want you and anyone else to be safe when it comes to electrical. Don't but the crap at Home Depot, lowes,etc . You will get a superior quality cord for the money at the wholesale house.

:welcome: To Autogeek Online!! :props:

Great information on the importance of using the correct gauge extension cords.. :props:

I have 3 cords:

50' - 12 gauge
100' - 12 gauge
50' - 10 gauge

ScottB
06-22-2014, 08:01 AM
spend the extra $$$ for cord ....

VISITOR
06-22-2014, 10:37 PM
buy a 12 gauge cord, one 50ft (or two) or 100ft...

chet31
06-22-2014, 10:40 PM
Good info here.

BillE
06-23-2014, 07:12 AM
This is one time where, bigger IS better.

Bill