
I have taken one side of a 240 volt receptacle and installed a 110 volt nearby. Is the poster's situation dangerous because of the jerry-rigged nature of the install? Or, is it considered unsafe to pull off a 240 volt outlet?
Have a good day!
Michael
i think the BX cable is the whip coming out of the appliance. Its usually hardwired with a disconnect somewhere.
Yes the cable is directly from the oven, do the wire have to be in the wall or can in be run in conduit?
How would you do this? My dad is a licensed electrician but has only done wiring for our previous house and does not know how to best go about this... He said he can get it done, just wants to know the best way. It's been on the "project" list for a little while.
First get a "old work box" and cut it int he Sheetrock. Pull the wire into the box so you don't have the wire coming out thru the Sheetrock.
Then install a plug in the box or terminate it however the manufacturer recommends.
Then jump out of the box to the garage.
Good luck.
is cutting an old work box into the garage wall going to compromise the fire rating? Im not an expert on that.
The appliance whip shouldnt be passing through the wall.
i would rework things to get the oven whip terminating into a box mounted in the bottom cabinet to the right of the oven.
Last, you cant supply anything else from the oven circuit anyways....has to be dedicated circuit.
Don't believe so as there was an intercom in there at one point, just a hole with an intercom stuffed inside.Is it a firewall?
The term firewall generally revolves around a wall built with fire rated Sheetrock and have a time rating associated (1hour, 2 hour, etc).
In Houston and surrounding areas we don't have this requirement. (especially in a 10+ year old house).
Is this an issue in NC?
Is it a firewall?
The term firewall generally revolves around a wall built with fire rated Sheetrock and have a time rating associated (1hour, 2 hour, etc).
In Houston and surrounding areas we don't have this requirement. (especially in a 10+ year old house).
Is this an issue in NC?
You can have outlets in the firewall. There are rules on this that allow a certain number. I looked this up once. Still, as Mrb said, you can't penetrate a wall with an appliance whip. You need to take out the oven and install a proper dedicated ciruit and metal box for the oven. I have a feeling the metal box has a cover with a knock out that receives the appliance whip connector. The box would be flushed into the sheetrock and the connection made through the cover.
there is a limitation on the total sq/in of opening in each cavity, and you cant have anything back to back.
its been building code for as long as I can remember, maybe someone can look up when it was first introduced, any walls and ceiling common to the garage and living space have to be drywalled with 1/2" on the walls and 5/8" on the ceiling mudded and taped, and the door has to be solid with a 20 min rating and be auto closing. Some jurisdictions have more restrictions.
I would like to know if there is any issue with installing multiple recepticles on a 240 v. circuit. I think it is OK, but wanted to verify. Not talking about the required dedicated oven run, but a general purpose 240 v. circuit like for a compressor or welder. So, I could string a couple 240 v. receptacles in parallel.
I would like to know if there is any issue with installing multiple recepticles on a 240 v. circuit. I think it is OK, but wanted to verify. Not talking about the required dedicated oven run, but a general purpose 240 v. circuit like for a compressor or welder. So, I could string a couple 240 v. receptacles in parallel.
i think this is what I was thinking of
Equipment fastened in place (not a luminaire) must not be rated more than 50% of the branch-circuit ampere rating if this circuit supplies luminaries, other receptacles, or both [210.23(A)(2).
so for example if you have a non-portable air compressor that needs a 30 amp / 240v circuit, you cant have a second receptacle on that circuit.
if you have a portable welder that needs a 50 amp / 240v circuit, you could have multiple 6-50 receptacles on this circuit.
When i was working for a cleanup co to clean up after fires we had a adapter that we would plug into a stove plug had 2 feet of wire on it into a box that had 2 range plugs on it. one side sead stove the outher sead to braker panel. The one that went to the mini panel we used to power our dryers and what not would turn off if the range was turned on. Not shure where they got it from tho
We do not have three wire range receptacles in Canada go figure (CSA says no)that device was probably something someone made. What would you do when you encountered a 3 wire range receptacle?