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r u crazy?

banning dryers is like banning microwaves, how about banning them?? cause we care so much about using energy, we could care less if food we put into our bodies is cooked with radition.
 
I go along with get the Gov't out of our laundry rooms!You should be able to get whatever washer and dryer you want.YOU are paying for its water and electric bills!I hate it when the Envio-freaks try to dictate to me what washer or dishwasher to buy-yet some of these folks may pour hundreds of gallons of water on their lawns and gardens and not say anything about it!Oh yes-that LG FL "Titanium" SS whaser dryer set STILL has not sold at Best Buy here-shows the demand for these machin es in my area is very low.If I have to pay over $1000 for a waasher it had better last me for 30yrs or I don't want it at any price.No sense in filling landfills with hi tech plastic and tin.
 
Nothing

but nothing makes me more furious than those people who want me to give up something "for me own good" when what they really want is to force me to bend my neck to their will.

That, I think, is the biggest problem those of us who really are concerned about the state of the environment face - those absolute fascist tyrants in the environmental movement who have no sense of humor, no interest in the effect of their rules and regulations on other people.

And I am among the furthest to the left of the folks around here - I can't imagine how much more strongly those who don't worry about the planet feel when confronted with the Birkenstock sandal wearing, öko-terrorists.

Of course, here in Europe, it is a bit easier to laugh them off - I have often listened to someone in my circle of acquaintances (not friends) raging on about how we all must drink green tea, brewed at precisely 87°C...while chain smoking their Roth-Handel cigarettes. (Roth-Handel make Camels look like child's candy).

Instead of banning this and banning that and making life dull and dreary, we need to focus on more efficient ways to do things.

Like a Porsche 911 or a BrAun KM-3.

Both are masterpieces of efficiency, yet I've never heard anyone feel they were giving anything up to use one.
 
240v Power In the United States

Will become standard, or at least more common shortly after (or just before), the Metric system! *LOL*

Have to agree that in many instances 220v/240v power is much more efficient than 120v/110, especially for heating and cooling appliances. Once one goes above 10,000 btu, IIRC all ACs start moving into the 220.

Aside from heating and cooling, motors run on 220v power are more durable and powerful, or so I've been told. Laundromat and other commercial washing machines without heaters still run on 220v power for their motors. This applies to front loaders, obviously.

For large apartment buildings the increased heating power a 220v dishwasher would bring to the picture actually would SAVE water. Instead of running taps to purge the lines of cold water, the thing could be hooked up directly to cold water and work fine. This would save landlords and building owners water and put much if not all the total running cost on the person using the unit.

As for washing machines, Americans still by and large are wedded to chlorine bleach, so uber hot water is not really required, thish the heating power of a 220v washer is lost upon many. Again, Miele the lone hold out saw the writing on the wall and gave up, that tells you what the future of 220v washing machines are in the United States.

L.
 
If you want 240V in your laundry room,garage,shop,etc-just have an electrican make the run.I know of many freinds that had 240V power outlets put in the garages and workshops-basements typically-to run woodworking power tools-examples-table saw,radial saw,and largest a planer with a 7Hp 240V motor.that required a "stove" outlet-50A.You can run up to 5Hp from a 240V 30A outlet.
for motors 3 ph ones are more "durable" since they have no start windings or start capacitors and start switches.As far as power--say if you have a 1Hp motor on 120V it is the same HP as a similar motor running off 240V-the current draw of the 240V motor will be halved.You can use smaller guage cable.
Again most apartment houses are wired with 3ph 208-120V.The dishwasher heater would still work on 208V-just take a little longer to heat.Only really old apt homes may have 240-120V single phase.This is VERY rare.these would be small buildings.
 
No, It Is Not All That Rare

220v in apartment houses and homes, again just ask Miele USA.

Here in the NYC area there are many,many older homes and multi-family buildings (read apartment houses, condos and co-ops) that not only do not have 220v power but no means to bring it into the power box or even up from the basement.

You have some very old housing stock here, and even some very exclusive areas such as Sutton Place and the Upper Eastside have apartments with fuse boxes. Worse still the power amounts to about 100amps. Of that the fuse box does not have two 220v legs, but one 120v line split into two to serve each side of the box. Depending upon the wiring inside the walls, conduit, risers and into the building, installing 220v power can mean ripping out walls, and opening up the sidewalk (to bring in more power from the street to the building).

NYC code requires all such work be done by a licensed electrican, who must submitt papers and so forth. As with anything else here, such work though "easy" is going to cost dear.
 
240V

In and of itself is wonderful, split-phase-US (and let's not get into that again) or single-phase (Europe, and yes I know it's nominally 230 since nothing brings out the anal-retentive like this discussion).

But the real advantages in durability and reliability come in with three-phase. Many newer washers now "synthesize" three-phase from 230V single-phase, the advantages are so great.

For one, when you have at least three phases available to you, it is merely a matter of hooking the windings up in the right angle and your motor is self starting at high torque. No clumsy centrifugal switches, no secondary "start" wiring.

For another, speed control is easier without major complications.

Yes, I am aware two-phase can also be used, but with considerable limitations.

It's easy to understand American resistance to the metric system. Instead of simply saying "4l" their manufacturers intentionally put them through the "3.91"liter=1 gallon torture to convince them that metric is a nightmare of complications.

It would be easier to switch a 127v system to 230v than the other way round, the wiring would all be over-dimensioned. But the search and find action to make sure every single consumer was converted...yikes! Just think how many transformers are hidden in the average house. My folk's house was built 60 years ago, but it has at least four transformers scattered throughout the walls and ceilings.
 
the area where I found the 208V wired apt homes was in the Wash DC and Greenville,NC where I live now.NYC is an older city than Greenville,and Wash DC apt buildings were very large or garden apt buildings.You could spot their three ph power from the street-the talltale 3 pole pigs on the pole with the secondary drops going into the building.The high rise buildings had the pad mounted 3ph transformers behind the building.
It sounds like if you are a woodworker in NYC and have to live in an apt you are out of luck.Esp if you have 220V motored tools.the woodworkers I knew lived in regular houses.With these its easier to get the 220-240V in other rooms where you may want it.At my Moms house she had a 220V15A line run to the garage so she could run her Craftsman radial arm saw-the motor could be wired to run from 120V or 220V.It was easier on 220V-no more tripped breakers during heavy cuts.
Yes,for small motors-its easy to get Three phase electronically for them with a VFD-Variable Frequency Drive.This appears on some power tools.VFD works best on three phase motors-VFD's can cause problems with single phase motors.You can imagine why.Yes-three phase is great for motors-just hook the legs to the motor and it should run.If it spins the wrong way-just reverse one of the phases-makes any three phase motor reversable.
Yes I would like small appliances and motors in the US to run from 220V-but the 240-120V single phase infranstructure is just to great now-would be difficult to change.The 220V system makes sense-At the transmitter plant where I work two of the 500Kw/250Kw transmitters use a 400V 3phase LV dist system for LV loads in the transmitter.go from one phase to ground or neutral and you get 220V.Simple!Phase to phase you get 400V.These transmitters have blower and pump motors that run from the 400V 3ph.the eletronic control circuits have primary voltages of 220V.The feeders going into the transmitters are 4160V 3 ph.The 4160 is stepped down to 400V-220V by a 3ph transformer in each transmitter.Its about 150-200Kva capacity.The Primaries for the HV transformers run from the 4160V.And yes Graingers and some other US motor suppliers and builders can provide 380-400V 3ph motors.Of course its 60Hz instead of 50Hz.
Other phase conversion devices are rotary convertors-typically single phase 240V input-220-240V 3 phase out to run your 3 ph motor from the single phase source.Phasemaster is a common brand of these devices.You can also run other 3 ph devices from Phasemasters-found some 3ph broadcast trasnmitters running off them-They work fine-you just have to connect critical single phase deives in the transmitter ot the 240V primary line-avioding the "Wild"leg of the convertor.For the transmitter-filament supplies have to go to the primary legs-3ph blower motors and transformers run fine from the Phasemaster.
 
Normal 208V 3ph supplies are fine-no problems-most broadcast trasnmitters I have worked on run from it.All three of the legs are stable.
If you have to use a phase convertor-the "phase" derived from the convertor may not work with some loads-filament supplies in transmitters.The voltage going to the tube in that case is unstable causing short tube life.Three phase rectifiers and transformers,motors are fine off the convertors.Electricians often called the phase derived from the convertor the "Wild Leg" becuase its voltage can be unstable in some conditions.Motors for the most part don't care.The first mention I saw of Phasemasters was in a VERY old Sears farm catalog I was reading at my Grandfathers house when I was a kid.These machines were common on farms that had single phase feeds but had some small three phase motors to run.The station that had the convertor was a 5KW AM transmitter site where no 3 ph power was available.5kW AM transmitters need 3Ph 208-240V to run from.When the transmitter was running-you heard weird sounds from the convertor as the transmitter was modulated.
 

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