0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 3999 times.
You likely won't be able to scab off a 240 circuit with one leg and do a 120 outlet. Reason being, the 240 volt line goes back to a two pole breaker that is (likely) physically tied together. When you introduce additional ampacity on one leg of that circuit, you create an imbalanced load and would not provide proper circuit protection, hence a code violation. You'll need to run a dedicated circuit or tie into an existing 120 circuit that has spare ampacity to run your system.
A (probably crazy) thought has been nagging at me the past few days. Since a lot of our US domestic 220v lines are created by doubling 110v lines, is it possible to tap into one of the individual 110v lines for a separate 110v outlet?My curiosity stems from it not being financially viable to run a dedicated 110v spur to my equipment, however one wall of my room is adjacent to the laundry room wall with the 220v run for the dryer. Most of the time, this run is unused and has no other equipment on it. Seems like a waste of a relatively clean run ...
Since a lot of our US domestic 220v lines are created by doubling 110v lines, is it possible to tap into one of the individual 110v lines for a separate 110v outlet?
however one wall of my room is adjacent to the laundry room wall with the 220v run for the dryer. Most of the time, this run is unused and has no other equipment on it. Seems like a waste of a relatively clean run ...
If it is a 4 wire then you might build something that would meet NEC, (National Electrical Code), and possibly city local electrical code. First problem you have is the breaker at the electrical panel is 30 amp. The breaker needed for a 120V 20 amp duplex receptacle has to be 20 amp per NEC code. 30 amp is too big... I'll stop here...
Thanks for all of the input folks!The dryer plug is 4 pin, the breaker I'll check tomorrow. In my uninformed mind, I imagined potentially wiring two separate outlets in their own recessed drywall boxes, one from each 120v run. It's quite literally on the opposite side of a shared interior wall.