240V electrical question - Printable Version +- Woodnet Forums (https://forums.woodnet.net) +-- Thread: 240V electrical question (/showthread.php?tid=7361352) |
RE: 240V electrical question - lincmercguy - 03-04-2021 "One of the slew of issues is keeping the frequency in sync as the generator will vary a little in frequency plus having the sine wave in sync. At the very least the plainer may let the smoke out. Anything you rig up is libel to cost more than running a few wires from the panel. " Yep, the 240V circuit is just two 120V circuits in opposite phase. The generator and shore power will not stay in sync, and there isn't a safe way to keep them in sync st this level of equipment. In the proposed setup, the voltage would vary between 0V and 240V as the sine waves drifted on each side. This is typically not very good for an AC motor. Having a 240V line run to the shop is not as scary and expensive as it sounds. If your panel is full, they do make breakers that take up two spots, but provide one 240V circuit and two 120v circuits. However, new codes are coming soon that require GFCI on 240V circuits in garages/shops. A good electrician can get that worked out. RE: 240V electrical question - lincmercguy - 03-04-2021 FWIW, I have a Champion generator that has both 240V and 120V. I ran shop tools from them while waiting for electric service. My dust collector was 240V and everything else is 120V, so it worked for that. The generator is a pretty loud solution and a pain to deal with for an extended period of time. RE: 240V electrical question - Roly - 03-04-2021 (03-04-2021, 01:35 PM)Peter Tremblay Wrote: Thanks Tom, Not necessarily, normally it is every other breaker is the opposite pole. And you should have a common trip between them so if one trips it will trip the other one. Roly RE: 240V electrical question - TDKPE - 03-04-2021 Sent you a PM, Peter. RE: 240V electrical question - cams2705 - 03-04-2021 Peter, is your shop anywhere near you laundry room? If you have an electric dryer, you could always branch off of there and just not do laundry and woodworking at the same time. RE: 240V electrical question - Wild Turkey - 03-05-2021 I "jack-legged" a 220v outlet off of the HVAC unit in my garage back when I was young and foolish. Worked fine as long as I didn't try to start saw when HVAC was in defrost mode RE: 240V electrical question - Admiral - 03-05-2021 Fr. Peter: not trying to be snarky or irreverent, but don't you have a parishioner who is an electrician looking for some indulgence credits?? Sorry, I had to ask . . . . RE: 240V electrical question - MT Woodworker - 03-05-2021 Why not hire an electrician and do it correctly, so no fires, electrocuting anyone? Safer, and if you ever sell, it is done the right way. RE: 240V electrical question - MarkSLSmith - 03-08-2021 (03-04-2021, 12:28 PM)TDKPE Wrote: That won't work for a slew of reasons, I'm afraid. I don't understand the need for the combiner thing. If you know that they are on opposite poles in the panel, especially if you can directly verify this via inspection, then aren't they automatically 240V? I'm asking because I have two dedicated 240V circuits, but I don't have room for another in the subpanel. I do, however, have 2 separate circuits coming from the main panel that I have been considering for eventual addition of a 240V plug in case I need it. Mark RE: 240V electrical question - TDKPE - 03-08-2021 (03-08-2021, 08:41 AM)MarkSLSmith Wrote: I don't understand the need for the combiner thing. If you know that they are on opposite poles in the panel, especially if you can directly verify this via inspection, then aren't they automatically 240V? Peter's original question was about using a 120V receptacle, plus a separate 120V generator, to create 240V for a thickness planer. It sort of moved on to getting 240V from two wall receptacle outlets, one each on L1 and L2, to create 240V using a combiner. He doesn't own the place, and it seems it's impractical to wire a 240V receptacle in the shop, though that's definitely the right way to go. In your case, you can put more than one receptacle outlet on a 240V circuit (I have 6 on my only 240V shop circuit, with 3 machines that use it), just like you can with a 120V circuit that's not dedicated to a single utilization equipment like a water heater or HVAC equipment. Or you can wire those two circuits to supply both 120V and 240V to receptacles, but that's not always easy or practical. |