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Moving a dryer outlet. Would this be within code?

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mrVanagon

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 21, 2015
Messages
105
Location
Belleville, IL, USA
Assuming you have not already bought the new Speed Queen dryer, I would replace the breaker with a 120/1-pole breaker, put a 4x4 box on the wall in place of the old 3-prong dryer outlet, put in a standard 120v receptacle with the correct cover and replace the dryer with a heat-pump unit that only needs a 120v/15A supply. The new dryer will cost a fair bit more that an old fashioned unit but likely cost about the same as a Speed Queen dryer and will use less energy.
 

RegeSullivan

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 30, 2014
Messages
695
Location
Canonsburg Pennsylvania (South of Pittsburgh)
You must be new here!

GJ is always.…. Over kill and Do the right thing ….

IF not you…. The guy behind ya !


While I agree w/ that…. Don’t ask the question if you don’t want the correct answer!


We all eat crow once in a while!
In fairness... meeting

Maybe using #10 wire for an appliance that draws over 20 amps isn't over kill???
 

wyliesdiesels

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Joined
Aug 14, 2012
Messages
19,983
Location
Modesto, CA
Wow i see im late to the party…

Understood. It hasn't burned in 40+ years. Russian roulette?
I dont get it. :headscrat

You come here asking if your proposed “burying a splice inside the wall” idea is to code. We tell you no then discover the existing wire you have is not gonna cut it because its a code violation and you want to ignore it and keep using it? :headshake

Bite the bullet and pull a new correct cable (10/3 NM-b) or get a different appliance that can run on 20a circuit.
 
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Saburai

Member
Joined
Aug 28, 2020
Messages
13
Location
Ocala Florida
Wow i see im late to the party…


I dont get it. :headscrat

You come here asking if your proposed “burying a splice inside the wall” idea is to code. We tell you no then discover the existing wire you have is not gonna cut it because its a code violation and you want to ignore it and keep using it? :headshake

Bite the bullet and pull a new correct cable (10/3 NM-b) or get a different appliance that can run on 20a circuit.
Yep, that's what I'm doing. It's a bit of a goat rope, but it is what it is.
 
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Saburai

Member
Joined
Aug 28, 2020
Messages
13
Location
Ocala Florida
Maybe you should use this existing 12/3 circuit for a new standard 120v receptacle, reconnect it in the panel to some other lightly used breaker, then run a new 240v 4-wire circuit to your newly placed 30A receptacle being the dryer. Find a way to run it to bypass the ductwork and other shenanigans you have there.
I'll be utilizing the existing 12/3 for a 120v outlet inside the cabinet. Thanks for the idea. I was so focused on the dryer that this had never occurred to me..
 

justsam

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 20, 2010
Messages
1,267
Location
Penngrove, California
I am certainly a fan of DIY but I am at a season of my life where at times I just say I don't want to do this job. This sounds like a candidate to me. A good electrician today has the expertise and wall fishing tools that few DIY folks have. And they have more flexible bodies that can deal with attics and crawl spaces. They need to feed their families too, may be time to consider!
 
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Saburai

Member
Joined
Aug 28, 2020
Messages
13
Location
Ocala Florida
I am certainly a fan of DIY but I am at a season of my life where at times I just say I don't want to do this job. This sounds like a candidate to me. A good electrician today has the expertise and wall fishing tools that few DIY folks have. And they have more flexible bodies that can deal with attics and crawl spaces. They need to feed their families too, may be time to consider!
Thanks for your thoughtful response. In addition to "good" we might add reasonably priced as well. In my area at least, finding quality tradesman is a challenge. Most times, I'm surprised when my call(s) is returned. When I finally ascertain the estimated cost, not to mention time frame - I best be sitting down...
Late in this life(63), I'm becoming a "carpenter" amongst other trades. I've been a hotrodder and car freak since childhood, dabbling in many other crafts, mostly metallic... After decades of a vagabond lifestyle, thanks to covid we've settled down and are renovating an small old farm. Many of the skills that I've learned I've done so because of the abject failings of the professionals that I've hired. I'll be doing this one myself and I'll know that it's right and proper- thanks to the help of the TGJ gang ;)
 
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