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I am looking to install a washer/dryer system in my apartment and have received mixed feedback about whether a 240v outlet can be ran through my existing subpanel to power the dryer.

Is there any way to tell if this is possible based on a picture of the subpanel?

There are no other major appliances within the apartment unit (only standard kitchen appliances).I believe the subpanel gets 40A from the main building panel (built in late 1960's - picture of the breaker from main panel attached and it says "40"). Any feedback would be much appreciated!

subpanel

main feed

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  • You should verify the feed amperage - a typical dryer outlet is "30A" and the dryer attached to it might draw 24A in use - which would leave only 16A for all your other loads (on each leg) , and that might well be a problem if your feed is only 40A.
    – Ecnerwal
    Commented Jul 9, 2020 at 0:21
  • You need six utilities for a washer/dryer: 1) dryer vent outside; 2) water drain; 3) cold water; 4) hot water (usually); 5) 120V power and 6) 240V power. Are you sure you can obtain 1-4? Because 6 is pointless without it... Commented Jul 9, 2020 at 0:47
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    You would also want to check with the landlord because the noise from the washer/dryer would travel to other units and would probably result in complaints.
    – JACK
    Commented Jul 9, 2020 at 0:57
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    @ThreePhaseEel the subpanel serves ~750SF. The circuits are as follows: 1 - empty 2 - empty 3 - Garbage Disposal 4 - empty 5 - Stove 6 - Lights 7 - frigdge 8 - Bathroom 9 - Microwave 10 - Kitchen lights 11 - empty 12 - bedroom
    – Homeowner
    Commented Jul 9, 2020 at 2:13
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    @ThreePhaseEel I believe just #10 (there are only 3 receptacles in the kitchen). How does that impact the ability to run a new 240V outlet?
    – Homeowner
    Commented Jul 9, 2020 at 3:08

1 Answer 1

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You don't have enough juice for a normal dryer

The problem you have is that while you have space in the panel for the circuits required, your feeder just can't quite provide enough grunt to support a bog-standard electric (condensing) dryer. In particular, you are looking at 750ft2*3VA/ft2 = 2250VA for lighting, along with 3 1500VA allowances for appliances (microwave, fridge+disposal, kitchen receptacles), which gives you 4313VA of load once you apply the 35% load factor for general loads over 3kVA, or 18A @ 240VAC. However, that load factor does not apply to the dryer's 5000VA load allowance, and you need to provide 1500VA (load factored, though) for the laundry small appliance circuit as well, which puts you at 9838VA of load, or 41A @ 240VAC, just a hair too large for your 40A feeder. Oops!

Heat pump dryers to the rescue!

However, there is a way to do what you want without breaking your apartment's feeder, although it does mean buying a not-so-cheap dryer. You see, in the quest to make a less piggy clothes dryer, some bright sparks hit on the idea of taking the exhaust air from a dryer's drum, running it through what's basically a dehumidifier, and then stuffing it back into the drum. This arrangement is called a heat pump dryer, and it has the upside that it is exceptionally efficient compared to any other powered clothes-drying means out there, in addition to not requiring a vent, either.

In particular, the Miele TWB1xx series of heat-pump dryers will run perfectly fine on a 120V outlet, pulling roughly 8A from that outlet. Along with your average apartment-sized washer, with its 8-12A of 120V load, it just barely fits onto a single 120V laundry small appliance branch circuit. Furthermore, we can skip the clothes dryer allotment in the load calculation as a result of this (allocating 5kVA in a loadcalc for an appliance that cannot ever draw that much power as it plugs into a 120V, 15A branch circuit is simply silly). As a result, we add one factored 1500VA small appliance allowance to our existing load, giving us 4838VA, or 20A @ 240VAC.

Note that this trickery only works with the Miele dryers -- the Samsung and Blomberg/Beko heat pump dryers both run on 240VAC circuits, and it appears the Samsung requires neutral as well, really constraining one's options when it comes to provisioning power for them. (Also, Samsung doesn't document how much electricity their dryer actually draws anywhere on their website or in the product specification sheet.)

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