No way to answer your question remotely. Typical dryer outlets in my area are 30A wired with 10awg 4 conductor copper. Only way to determine for sure what you have is to go to the breaker panel and read the capacity written on the dryer circuit breaker.Beerswimmer wrote: ↑Wed Feb 12, 2020 1:10 pmHmmm...not sure. Probably not, it's just a standard? 240 for my dryer. I was thinking 2 elements just to increase heat up times and then unplug one once it's getting close to temp. I'm planning on a 26 gallon milk can and possibly connecting 2 with the second being a thumper. I just don't want to wait for hours+ for it to heat up. What would a regular 240 outlet be able to handle? Maybe I could use the 240 plus a 110 in combo for heat up?? I really have no clue and I'm just starting to mentally work out what I need to get and what will work...
Sorry, I'm not trying to hijack this thread. I can start a new one if needed.
Yeah, you could do a second element on a 110v circuit; 1500w is the max for a standard 15A circuit/outlet.