I need to run at 220 V circuit to the garage as I have moved up to a bigger table saw. I have a 30 amp unused circuit running to the dryer in the basement which was switched over to natural gas many years ago. This leaves this circuit as unused. The house is from the 50's, and the wire and outlet by dryer may be original, I don't know. I do a lot of electrical if I understand what I am doing and can stay away from the house panel. So what I want to do is take that wire that runs to the dryer, inspect it and if it looks nice and flexible, move it closer to the garage, make a junction box and just run new wire from the junction box up to the garage. Any thoughts on this approach? If this is not tripping any red flags yet, here is my next question. The Unisaw that I bought needs 220 volt 12 amps plus some leeway. I normally would only run one tool at a time although I may want to switch my dust collector over to 220 and that would run at same time. My current dust collector is small and would only be 5.5 amps if I switched it to 220. My question is, what size wire would I use from the junction to the garage, can a 30 amp run support more than 1 220 tool at a time if the total amperage between the tools in use was less than some number? Would I be better off running a whole new line from the house panel (which is pretty full) to the garage? I definitely want to place the 220 outlets in multiple places in the garage (probably two as it seems that 220 cords are reasonably long and it is only a single car garage.
One other note is that I also have an unused electrical heater in the basement that may be 220 - it has a double pull 20 amp breaker. I don't use it but thought about keeping it in case the furnace died during a real cold snap. It may be enough to keep the pipes from freezing - although I am a little afraid to turn it on as it is old! I could reuse this circuit if needed.
Thanks in advance for feedback.
One other note is that I also have an unused electrical heater in the basement that may be 220 - it has a double pull 20 amp breaker. I don't use it but thought about keeping it in case the furnace died during a real cold snap. It may be enough to keep the pipes from freezing - although I am a little afraid to turn it on as it is old! I could reuse this circuit if needed.
Thanks in advance for feedback.