 |
|
|
 |
New Member
|
|
Jul 19, 2008, 09:55 AM
|
|
Wiring a hot water heater
I'm installing a hot water heater at the cottage, there is a 240 circuit already in place that was wired for a dryer - so it has black, red, white and bare copper. The water heater has the standard black, red and green for 240v. I know the dryer wire black and red are hot and on the water heater black is hot and the red neutral, so can I hook up the black and red from the circuit to the black on the heater, then the white to the red on the heater, leaving the green to ground along with the copper from the heater? Or do I just cap off the red from the circuit, or do I need to run new 3 wire cable from the panel?
Cheers
|
|
 |
Uber Member
|
|
Jul 19, 2008, 10:17 AM
|
|
Are you sure this is 120 volts? if so, cap the red wire from panel, connect the white from wall and connect to red, then black to black. Change to single pole breaker.
If the water heater is 240 volts, hook red to red and black to black and cap the white.
Breaker can not be larger than the wire it is protecting. Dryers are usually 30 amp breakers and #10 wire. Likely need a 20 or 30 amp breaker, nameplate will tell.
|
|
 |
Home Improvement & Construction Expert
|
|
Jul 19, 2008, 12:20 PM
|
|
The red and black are hot in both cases. The white is neutral for dryer but is not needed for water heater. Cap off white, connect red and black wires together. Connect grounds. Breaker should be 30 amp.
|
|
 |
Uber Member
|
|
Jul 19, 2008, 03:15 PM
|
|
Could have sworn original said 120 for water heater, my mistake?
|
|
 |
New Member
|
|
Jul 19, 2008, 08:02 PM
|
|
 Originally Posted by flyfishnorth
i'm installing a hot water heater at the cottage, there is a 240 circuit already in place that was wired for a dryer - so it has black, red, white and bare copper. the water heater has the standard black, red and green for 240v. I know the dryer wire black and red are hot and on the water heater black is hot and the red neutral, so can I hook up the black and red from the circuit to the black on the heater, then the white to the red on the heater, leaving the green to ground along with the copper from the heater? or do I just cap off the red from the circuit, or do I need to run new 3 wire cable from the panel?
cheers
Thank you both, heater is 240. Hot running water on the way!
|
|
Question Tools |
Search this Question |
|
|
Add your answer here.
Check out some similar questions!
Wiring Hot Water Heater
[ 1 Answers ]
I am wiring hot water heater to 2 pole 3 amp breaker.
Hot Water tank has double thermostat. At the top of the water heater are two wires, one black and one red. No white wires as I am normally familiar.
Is there a way to wire without using a junction box? The heater is very close to panel. If...
Hot water heater wiring
[ 3 Answers ]
I have a 30 amp hot water heater I want to put a switch on it how do I conect the wires to th switch?
Ron
Hot water heater wiring
[ 3 Answers ]
My question concerns the installation of a 40 gallon electric hot water heater. It will have 2 elements (upper and lower), each of which carries a load of 4500 watts. I believe it requires 240 hookup. I plan on hardwiring it (no plug), but I need to know what wire size and breaker size to use. ...
Wiring hot water heater to 110
[ 4 Answers ]
How do I wire a hot water heater that is set up for 240 to 110? I don't want to have to put in a 220 plug I just want to run it off the 110 source already there. Any help would be great.
Wiring a hot water heater
[ 1 Answers ]
I am wanting to wire a new hot water heater that is 220. Do you have a diagram of a subpanel that I could use? What do I look for on the subpanel, what wire do I use, and how does this wiring differ from 110? LK
View more questions
Search
|