Hello all,
I have a 6-50R welder plug in my shop that I'd like to use to power an electric dryer. The dryer is the older 3 prong type. I don't know if this can be done or I should just convert to a dryer receptacle and then adapt for my welder? I see plenty of those conversions just not the other way around.
Thanks!
When you say plug did you mean outlet?
No you cannot do what you want.
The welder outlet not only is 50a but is 240v only- 2 hots and a ground. A dryer needs 120v/240v- 2 hots neutral and ground.
If you hookup your dryer to that outlet, you will be putting neutral return current on the ground wire, which may be bare, potentially energizing other grounded metal, which is a no no.
Older 3 wire dryer circuits had 2 hots and a neutral/no ground feeding a 10-30r. However, all 3 wires were insulated. The 3-wire dryer circuit has the potential to be hazardous because of the neutral to chassis bond on the dryer terminal strip.
These circuits are no longer allowed as of 1996, due to the possible shock hazard.
You should run a new circuit.
And to add to my question:
My dryer is a 10-30P plug, I don't see much difference in the wiring diagram of these. I'd like it to be easy to change from welder to dryer since the wife will be making the change to use the dryer.
The only way to do this is if there is a 4-wire feed to the outlet.
Then you would need to change the breaker to 30a and put in a 14-30r.
Also change the plug on the dryer to 14-30.
Its more of a PITA than just running a new circuit especially if the panel i close by.
The dryer is 30A....your plug is 50A.
Putting a 4-prong on your dryer is not an issue....the neutral will just not be hooked up.
To be safe, I'd swap out the 50a breaker with a 30A flavor.
And then how will a 4-wire dryer function without the neutral?
What you suggest doesnt work.