mbrooke
Batteries Included
- Location
- United States
- Occupation
- Technician
After all this I went to a new house we just finished. The dryer was 4 wire but the washer had a 4 wire 30 amp cord also. Now looking at it one would think you needed 2- 30 amp circuits but I remembered years ago- these units are 12 years old- Miele made these and you had to buy a splitter specifically made for these unit. Plug the splitter into the 30 amp dryer plug and attached was a jb with 2- 30 amp receptacles with in line fuses.
So she has to buy this $240 unit have it shipped etc- probably $275 which she should have had when she first got it. Apparently the electrician wired up a small panel and fed them separately from the dryer cir. I thought we had screwed up--- They don't make these units like that any more for obvious reasons. The washer had 2- 1300 watt heater elements for the hot water.-- Dryer only had 10 amp draw.
When 240 volt appliances first started hitting the US they often were designed to plug in the only 240 volt outlet near by which was for the dryer. So manufactures got creative. Also a lot of them required to have a 4 wire plug just because that's what the dryer plug was even though the washer may not have need a neutral.
Just to point out a lot of older bosch dryers had a 15 amp 240 volt plug in the back of them for a matching 240 volt washer. Dryer used 15 amps max as well as the washer so a single dryer circuit could do both of them. Often because the dryer was more compact and the washer spun faster the dryer could get away with less power.
Today there are a lot of washers on the market with NEMA 6-15 or NEMA 6-20plugs that are either European washers that were given a UL listing for international use or plain American versions with built in heaters.
Just for kicks most Euro washers only have a cold fill valve and a built in heater. They will always fill cold, but depending on the cycle a built in heater will heat the water to what ever temperature the programing calls for.