- First Name
- Carlos
- Joined
- Jul 26, 2021
- Threads
- 11
- Messages
- 1,168
- Reaction score
- 1,657
- Location
- Peoria, AZ
- Vehicles
- Rivian R1T, Zero SR/S, Smart
- Occupation
- Geek
- Banned
- #91
It was probably a $300 model sold for $20 with a missing cord.
Sponsored
work at home = no clothes??We’re going on 15 years on a used drier that I bought for $20. I can’t make an $800 purchase make sense. Also, working from home reduces laundry a lot.
Not too hard to find bargains on used appliances.That only works if you can find someone selling an $800 drier for $20.
Not saying it doesn't happen; our second machine we bought for $50 plus $50 parts I installed. A replacement is $800 new.
-Crissa
I also love my LG but hate the user interface and options. Washer has all these cycles but they don’t tell you want they do. Bedding, Whites, sanitize. What if I want to sanitize my white bedding?It's not, as far as I know, actually cheaper to run, tho. I have two. (And hate that the new one does not run in low-heat mode like the old ones. It's like the made it stupider when they made it 'smart').
-Crissa
Yeah, but sometimes that means getting one with a burned out controller that can't be replaced. Or black mold somewhere it can't be extracted from.Not too hard to find bargains on used appliances.
Yeah, mine's missing that one. It's not in the list O can download. It's like the marketing got to choose what was programmed, and they made all these box-checking features, without making them at all useful.
That is a great advantage if someone really needs to do it. But if you CAN use 240v, it will be more efficient. High motor usage at 120v wastes a bit of power. Not enough to matter if you are limited in outlets and would have to install one.Bringing this 10% of the way back to the original thread topic of electrical outlets:
Some condensing dryers can plug into a regular 120V outlet! This is a potential solution for someone wanting to repurpose a 30A 240V dryer circuit to use on a EV charging circuit. This could be useful for a house with only 100A service that was already near the upper end of the calculated capacity for all circuits.
Yep, exactly!Bringing this 10% of the way back to the original thread topic of electrical outlets:
Some condensing dryers can plug into a regular 120V outlet! This is a potential solution for someone wanting to repurpose a 30A 240V dryer circuit to use on a EV charging circuit. This could be useful for a house with only 100A service that was already near the upper end of the calculated capacity for all circuits.
A condensing dryer that runs off a 15A or 20A 120 volt circuit will almost certainly draw less current than a condensing dryer that requires a 20 or 30 amp 240V circuit. The advantage is not that it runs on 120 volts, it's that it has been designed to not need as much powerThat is a great advantage if someone really needs to do it. But if you CAN use 240v, it will be more efficient. High motor usage at 120v wastes a bit of power. Not enough to matter if you are limited in outlets and would have to install one.
However you're possibly mistaken on thinking that the 100A limit changes based on voltage. It does not. It all comes down to how many watts does it take to do the job; you halve the voltage, you double the current.