Gas cooktop installation, Gas supply requirements, Electrical requirements – Wolf REV-A 5/2010 814990 User Manual

Page 11

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Gas Cooktop Installation

11

wolfappliance.com/specs

Gas Supply Requirements

GAS MANIFOLD PRESSURE

Natural Gas: Standard orifices are set for 5"

(12.5 mb)

WC (water column).

LP Gas: Standard orifices are set for 10"

(25 mb)

WC.

Gas Supply Pressure: The maximum gas supply

pressure to the regulator should never exceed 14"

(34.9 mb)

WC; .5 psi

(3.5 kPa)

for natural and LP gas.

The minimum line pressure is 7"

(17.5 mb)

WC for

natural gas and 11"

(27.4 mb)

WC for LP gas.

Gas Pressure Regulator: To control and maintain a

uniform gas pressure in the gas manifold, the unit must

be used with a gas pressure regulator. The burner

orifices, etc. are sized for the gas pressure delivered by

the supplied regulator. Do not remove the regulator.

The maximum gas supply pressure to the regulator

should never exceed 14"

(34.9 mb)

WC; .5 psi

(3.5 kPa)

.

Electrical Requirements

The Wolf gas cooktop requires a 120 V AC, 60 Hz electri-

cal supply to operate the electronic ignition system. The

service should have its own 15 amp circuit breaker. A

ground fault circuit interrupter (GFCI) is not recommended

and may cause interruption of operation.

The cooktop is equipped with a power cord with a 3-prong

grounding plug. To minimize shock hazard, the power cord

must be plugged into a mating 3-prong grounded outlet,

grounded to conform with the National Electrical Code,

ANSI/NFPA 70 latest edition, or Canadian Electrical Code

(CSA) and all local codes and ordinances. Refer to the

illustration below.

IMPORTANT NOTE:

Do not ground to a gas pipe.

WIRING DIAGRAM

A wiring diagram covering the control circuit for each gas

cooktop model can be found on the following page.

GROUNDING

PLUG

GROUNDED

ELECTRICAL OUTLET

Electrical ground.

ELECTRICAL SHOCK HAZARD: Plug into a grounded

3-prong outlet. Do not remove ground prong. Do not

use an adapter. Failure to follow these instructions can

result in electric shock, fire or death.

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