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Jul 14 at 20:11 comment added Harper - Reinstate Monica @supercat I think that would be fantastic, but the autotransformer would be of considerable size on a dryer. Most dryer models are made in both gas and electric dialects. They have 95% parts commonality, differing only in gas heat stove vs electric heating element. So, 240V dryers are 120V creatures in all respects except the heating element. It would work better on ranges, where the load is only oven light, clock and controls.
Jul 10 at 19:41 comment added supercat ...but still offer all the safety benefits of a four-wire connection.
Jul 10 at 19:40 comment added supercat If the chicken and egg problem between manufacturers, consumers, and regulatory agencies were overcome, what downsides would you see to having a UL rated assembly that could fit in an oversized junction box that would combine an autotransformer, a dryer outlet, and a a thermal cutout that would disconnect both legs of the 220V supply, perhaps including an attachment for a Bowden cable which could in turn connect to an external actuating lever if the box itself would be in an inconvenient location? I would think in many installations that would be cheaper than running a new cable...
Jul 10 at 18:39 comment added Harper - Reinstate Monica @supercat but purely on a "what do people ask about online" basis, the 3-prong is still heavily in circulation if not dominant.
Jul 9 at 14:39 comment added supercat Since many electrical codes have for years required running 3-wire (plus ground) service, such ovens would only be advantageous in places that don't already have such service. In those situations, I would think having a UL listed autotransformer/circuit breaker assembly (which would cut 240V power in case the transformer wouwould be overloaded) would be better than grandfathering things. By question was about why the problem wasn't averted half a century ago.
Jul 9 at 4:46 comment added Harper - Reinstate Monica @supercat Really, this could be solved in a year with a $100 excise tax on ovens that require 120/240V.
Jul 7 at 19:49 comment added supercat I wonder why ovens didn't simply use a pair of sockets in series, and specify that bulb life will be adversely affected if the installed bulbs don't match? Or why, in more recent decades, they haven't switched to using a triac-based dimmer circuit?
Jul 6 at 21:03 history answered Harper - Reinstate Monica CC BY-SA 4.0