I asked this on another site but got NO help, except for "pay someone to do it"
Right now, there's a 220v 10ga line with a 60a breaker run into the shop for some old printing presses, but they have the old style plug, I bought one of those 50a wall mount outlet boxes that has the socket for a welder. The existing plug is inside the shop, and I want to put the new one in the garage, which is directly on the opposite side of the wall of the existing plug. Maybe 8" through the wall. The presses are never used so the only thing that will be on the circuit will be the welder.
My question is, can I just pigtail off the existing outlet with about a foot of 10 or 12 ga wire, run it through the wall and into the new outlet? I've done it before with 110v adding an extra light to a switch, Is the 220v wiring basically the same as 110, but just with more volts?
Or would the easiest way be make a super short extension cord that has the old style male plug that will plug into the existing socket? or would that hurt the voltage going to the welder, going through that many plugs?
Also, I checked it with my DMM and it reads about 248-249v, even the plugs in the house read 124-125v. Is that acceptable or too high of a voltage?
Right now, there's a 220v 10ga line with a 60a breaker run into the shop for some old printing presses, but they have the old style plug, I bought one of those 50a wall mount outlet boxes that has the socket for a welder. The existing plug is inside the shop, and I want to put the new one in the garage, which is directly on the opposite side of the wall of the existing plug. Maybe 8" through the wall. The presses are never used so the only thing that will be on the circuit will be the welder.
My question is, can I just pigtail off the existing outlet with about a foot of 10 or 12 ga wire, run it through the wall and into the new outlet? I've done it before with 110v adding an extra light to a switch, Is the 220v wiring basically the same as 110, but just with more volts?
Or would the easiest way be make a super short extension cord that has the old style male plug that will plug into the existing socket? or would that hurt the voltage going to the welder, going through that many plugs?
Also, I checked it with my DMM and it reads about 248-249v, even the plugs in the house read 124-125v. Is that acceptable or too high of a voltage?