15 amps vs 20 amps


Firstly, let me state that I’m no electrician so forgive my ignorance about all this....

My wife and I have just moved to a new house.  We’re very happy, but there’s something unusual about the house! The great news is that it’s almost completely Ethernet wired and came with a kick-ass networking system. Fabulous wireless and Ethernet performance everywhere.

After a few days unboxing and settling in, I thought I’d rig up my system.  This is where the apologies start - I hadn’t actually noticed that most of the house is supplied by a 20 amp circuit, until I tried plugging in my Audioquest Storm power cable, which is meant to connect to my15amp Niagara power supply, and then to my components. No harm done, but the plug was clearly not fitting easily into the outlet. I didn’t force it and stopped  my installation. 
It looks like setting up my system is going to be a project.  Firstly, can anyone tell me if it’s ok using 15 amp audio components through 20 amp outlets? Do I need to change anything like fuses, plugs, outlets? Will 20 amps be good/bad/same for performance? Safety concerns?

As you can tell, I know very little about this and would prefer not to make a costly mistake.

thanks for any advice.




janehamble

Showing 2 responses by jea48

My wife and I have just moved to a new house
As in a brand new constructed house?

First the 20 amp outlets may be spec grade. As a rule spec grade outlets will have beefier contacts than cheapo residential grade outlets. The spec grade contacts holding contact pressure will be greater requiring more effort in pushing the plug in and pulling it out of the outlet than the cheapo residential grade.

Second there is a good chance the outlet is a TR (Tamper Resistant) type outlet. Some can be a pain in the you know what to plug anything into. TR outlets have shutters that cover the hot and neutral contacts to help prevent young children from sticking metal objects into the hot contact of the outlet. If the outlet is a TR outlet you need to make sure you push the plug blades in as perpendicular to the contact shutters as possible. Both plug blades pushing evenly against the shutters at the same time.


Example of a 20 amp TR duplex receptacle outlet.
https://www.homedepot.com/p/Leviton-20-Amp-Commercial-Grade-Tamper-Resistant-Backwired-Self-Groundin...

Note the shutters.

The house is not new but was fairly recently rewired.
@janehamble


If the rewire was done after 2009 there is a good chance the governing AHJ (Authority Having Jurisdiction) adopted the 2008 NEC section in the code requiring TR outlets in habitual areas in a dwelling unit.

Is the duplex receptacle a TR outlet?

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