residentially, a dedicated circuit, try to separate it from other wiring to the extent possible. anything you might want to add to that? yes, they re called a clean circuit. you use the m.c. cable or 12-three, 12-2, the whole circuit. the computer or the microwave. so if you can probably do it, it sounds like putting in some kind of metal conduit-clad cable or something that will really reduce the interference. read for me what all these little things mean here. let s tip it up a little bit. priority a.w.g. 6-3 type s.o.o. w 600 volt sunlight and water resistant. which means what? it means it s a cord rather than a cable or wire. the cord is not to be used for permanent wiring. this is a cord that is designed for temporary power. it s a big cord. it is, it s 50 amp. what do they mean when they say primary? i don t know what it means. american wire gauge, the six is the size of the aware, the 3 is the three conductors, the type s.o.o.w., that s extra hard u
question. there are a lot of answers to it. one solution would to have a dedicated circuit, a kyr kit that comes from the panel board that only supplies the receptacles that you re going to be using for the computer or sensitive equipment is one answer. you want to make sure that you install that circuit, the wires are remote from any radio frequency devices or any other circuits that might impose a radio frequency on them. what kind of wires would impose a radio frequency? it could be a computer, another computer, it could be the microwave oven. you want to separate is from any other ideally. if you re running your wires in a raceway or an armored cable that uses ferrous metal, that protects those conductors against these radio frequencies much better than nonmetallic cable. that would be another strategy. and then if you re in a commercial installation where it is really, really important, you put in isolation transformers adjacent to the equipment. that s the mos
go about getting really clean power? that s a very complicated question. there are a lot of answers to it. one solution would to have a dedicated circuit, a kyr kit that comes from the panel board that only supplies the receptacles that you re going to be using for the computer or sensitive equipment is one answer. you want to make sure that you install that circuit, the wires are remote from any radio frequency devices or any other circuits that might impose a radio frequency on them. what kind of wires would impose a radio frequency? it could be a computer, another computer, it could be the microwave oven. you want to separate is from any other ideally. if you re running your wires in a raceway or an armored cable that uses ferrous metal, that protects those conductors against these radio frequencies much better than nonmetallic cable. that would be another strategy. and then if you re in a commercial installation where it is really, really important, you put in