How to Convert a 220 outlet to a 110 Outlet. Converting 240 volt to 120 volt . SUBSCRIBE 4 More!!

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  • čas přidán 23. 09. 2020
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Komentáře • 79

  • @javonj377
    @javonj377 Před 16 dny

    This was the perfect amount of info not too little not too much.

  • @TheAdamballah
    @TheAdamballah Před 3 lety +5

    These are quality videos!! Fired up.

  • @bencarson2257
    @bencarson2257 Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you for the free info. I owe u bruh 😎

  • @fabiangomes8968
    @fabiangomes8968 Před rokem +1

    True Master in his craft.

  • @vince6829
    @vince6829 Před rokem

    Thank you for sharing.

  • @freebirdsparrowbuschronicl1085

    Thanks man!

  • @robertbrown6623
    @robertbrown6623 Před 2 lety +6

    At the 4:07 mark you talk about another video for how to connect the neutral pigtail to the neutral bar but I'm struggling to find that video. Can you provide the link?

  • @Peacekeeper7777
    @Peacekeeper7777 Před 2 lety

    Yay! Thank you great video! My landlord won’t let me run 220 so I have to switch it to 110! I’m so glad it’s a possibility!!!

  • @markmcgranahan5954
    @markmcgranahan5954 Před rokem

    Cool video man

  • @pdzh
    @pdzh Před 2 lety +14

    the only thing I would probably do different here is install the outlet with 20 amp receptacle since there is 20 amp wire and 20 amp breaker there. just to give a costumer potentially plug in 20 amp AC unit or a tool into it. it might be few $ more for the receptacle but it will give one more option for the costumer.

  • @fisforfriendship6093
    @fisforfriendship6093 Před 9 měsíci

    question dont you need to make sure your afci is compatible with the i believe 10awg wire that remained on the 220 circuit? when you stepped down the voltage i can only think its for a 15 or 20 amp circuit that uses 14 or 12 awg wire. im sure you fit the wires in the device but i heard your supposed to check to see if 10 awg is compatible for the afci as well

  • @CrepitusRex
    @CrepitusRex Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks dude. I won't attempt this myself, but now I'll know if I'm getting ripped off. Peace

  • @stanmoney8470
    @stanmoney8470 Před 2 lety +2

    He knows what he's doing and he's done it before. As a professional Electrician myself. I'd encourage you to not tamper with electrical if you don't have experience at it

    • @dick8997
      @dick8997 Před rokem

      How ya gonna gain experience if ya never tamper with some stuff lol

  • @jonking7345
    @jonking7345 Před 2 lety +2

    What happens if it's 8 gauge wire to a range?

  • @williamw5604
    @williamw5604 Před 6 měsíci

    I know this is old but why is there no neutral wire in the initial 240 volt setup at the outlet? Why do you need a neutral for 110 but not 240? Thanks

  • @robertkahler2
    @robertkahler2 Před rokem

    I like how at 3:42 he reminds to never work on a panel that is energized and there is arcing evidence on the panel back.

  • @david94sc
    @david94sc Před 5 měsíci

    Why would you need an arc fault breaker?

  • @kurtw356
    @kurtw356 Před 7 měsíci +1

    how are you connecting a 8 guage wire to a 14 guage receptacle I missed something

  • @vannabells3724
    @vannabells3724 Před 3 lety +1

    What was the reason for using a GFI breaker? Code? Would a standard 120 breaker have worked perfectly well?

    • @ElectricalCodeCoach
      @ElectricalCodeCoach  Před 3 lety +3

      You could have used an AFCI only breaker but since I had to do panel work anyways I went ahead and put it on a dual function that does AFCI and GFCI I'm all about dual function technology

    • @ElectricalCodeCoach
      @ElectricalCodeCoach  Před 3 lety

      And thanks for the comment!

  • @gt5228z
    @gt5228z Před rokem +2

    Hello, I have a question. I'm moving the washer and dryer to a new room. I use a gas dryer but I'm still thinking about installing the 4 prong outlet. Even though my dryer is gas, it still needs 110 to run obviously. I'm wondering if I can install just the 220 4 prong outlet and make use of it via an adapter to power my washer and gas dryer instead of running a new 20amp 110 circuit. thanks.

  • @brendonsartory5526
    @brendonsartory5526 Před 3 lety +1

    What was that black roundish padded seat cushion thing for that was next to the old outlet?

    • @ElectricalCodeCoach
      @ElectricalCodeCoach  Před 3 lety +1

      Lol it's hard to tell but I think it's the vent for the air conditioner

    • @brendonsartory5526
      @brendonsartory5526 Před 3 lety

      @@ElectricalCodeCoach It looked more like the edge of a round inner tube or the size of a leather chair.

    • @electricianhub86
      @electricianhub86 Před 3 lety +2

      LOL when I'm in someone's house they could have an elephant in the room and I wouldn't know it

    • @brendonsartory5526
      @brendonsartory5526 Před 3 lety +1

      That's a funny comment. You did a good job with the electrical outlet by the way.

  • @albrightsharleydavidsongar4831

    Why not use white receptacle and cover plate to match base boards?

    • @ElectricalCodeCoach
      @ElectricalCodeCoach  Před 2 lety +1

      Great question, I had to match all the other receptacles in the house they're all that color.

  • @jeannyboy9588
    @jeannyboy9588 Před 2 lety +3

    Great video. What’s the approximate cost of this installation? Thank you

    • @ElectricalCodeCoach
      @ElectricalCodeCoach  Před 2 lety +2

      Just depends on the scenario, could be in the $180 to $280 range could be higher plus parts

  • @joeclark9042
    @joeclark9042 Před 3 lety +1

    what side does the black go one and what side does the ground go on bro

    • @ElectricalCodeCoach
      @ElectricalCodeCoach  Před 3 lety +1

      Great question! once converted the receptacle can be wired like normal.

  • @katodrums
    @katodrums Před 3 lety +1

    what’s with the panel? Looks like there was water damage ? Lots of rust?

    • @ElectricalCodeCoach
      @ElectricalCodeCoach  Před 3 lety

      Could have been a high moisture basement! Sorry for the late response!!

  • @lolol7110
    @lolol7110 Před rokem

    Let’s get to it

  • @taylormills08
    @taylormills08 Před 2 lety +3

    Great video and explanation. I’m a fan of your methodology.
    I do have a question. You said the HO was tripping a breaker when turning on both air conditioners. How did this solve their problem?

    • @ElectricalCodeCoach
      @ElectricalCodeCoach  Před 2 lety +2

      Great question! Yep it fixed their problem it put it on a dedicated circuit, the reason they were tripping it before is because they were plugging it into a circuit that was running half of the upstairs and then they were plugging into air conditioners.

    • @taylormills08
      @taylormills08 Před 2 lety

      @@ElectricalCodeCoach ohhk gotcha. So the 240v outlet was just unused and they had two 120v a/c units needing to be plugged in.

    • @rickymeadows5176
      @rickymeadows5176 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@ElectricalCodeCoach Yep, too bad they don't teach Ohm's Law in every high school math class. Also never fails in the winter when the folks start plugging in space heaters to an already taxed-out 120v 15amp circuit branch.

  • @eufemioporras569
    @eufemioporras569 Před 3 lety +1

    Gud day sir just asking if how many outlet/0utlets CAN a 220volts converted TO110volts by using a ground as source pls. Inligthen me thanks and more power.

  • @lien302
    @lien302 Před rokem

    Couldn’t you just use and connect to one of two 110 breaker to go from 220V to 110V?

  • @mathewtucker9498
    @mathewtucker9498 Před 3 lety

    What made the voltage reading change from 240+ down to 120+? Did I miss a step?

    • @ElectricalCodeCoach
      @ElectricalCodeCoach  Před 3 lety +1

      Great question!! When I did the panel work!! Thanks!!

    • @MrBird250
      @MrBird250 Před 2 lety +2

      in the panel you have 2 legs 120v + 120v when you run a double pole breaker you are using both poles for 120 +120 = 240. he removed the double pole breaker and used a single pole breaker pulling 120 from 1 leg in the box. wired up all nice an neat. Hope that helped.

    • @javierperez4039
      @javierperez4039 Před 2 lety +4

      Existing 240v receptacle wired using 3-wire method. It used Black and White as hot legs and the bare conductor as a neutral. He simply used the white line as the neutral, and at the panel he relocated the white wire for the circuit. Instead of going into the breaker, it went into the neutral bar. At the receptacle box, Black remained his hot leg, white became his neutral, and bare became his ground. His breaker went from a 2-pole (supports 240v) to a Single pole (supports 120v). To abide current code he is required to install a AFCI breaker due to the receptacle location, he went above the minimum and installed a dual function (GFCI+AFCI)

  • @janeprescott7381
    @janeprescott7381 Před 2 lety +1

    What a dedicated outlet.
    Looks like a face.

  • @arthurhazleton379
    @arthurhazleton379 Před rokem

    I’m curious. Wouldn’t the 110 breaker keep failing with a 220 line going into it?

    • @illestofdemall13
      @illestofdemall13 Před rokem +7

      There's no 220 line. A 240V circuit is 2 hots that are each 120V to ground, but they are out of phase with each other so they add up to 240 volts. It is basically two 120 volt breakers joined to create a 2 pole 120/240 volt breaker. When you take one of the legs out and connect it to neutral, the circuit is now 120V and the hot can be connected to a single pole 120 volt breaker.

    • @arthurhazleton379
      @arthurhazleton379 Před rokem

      @@illestofdemall13 thank you

  • @sevenmalards
    @sevenmalards Před 2 lety

    I have to convert a 220 cook top to 110 for a gas range. The wires are white, black, red. Old panel with no ground wire. Is it possible?

  • @OliveMule
    @OliveMule Před 3 lety +2

    GO FROM BEING SLEEPY LOOKING
    TO
    BEING WIDE AWAKE LOOKING

  • @davidwender4349
    @davidwender4349 Před 3 lety +2

    120/240 volt

  • @acapulco1231
    @acapulco1231 Před 3 lety +1

    How do you convert 120 to 240 outlet ?

    • @ElectricalCodeCoach
      @ElectricalCodeCoach  Před 3 lety +1

      That will make a great video, I will put some information on that!

    • @acapulco1231
      @acapulco1231 Před 3 lety

      @@ElectricalCodeCoach Yes, Please.
      I am finishing my basement and I want to know if the contractor who did my rough electrical left that particular outlet for a 120V or 240V. I have no idea what show I be looking at..... Basically I see an open blue box with 2 lines and each line has
      3 cables in it. Is that mean it is ready for a 240V outlet ?

  • @veracity91
    @veracity91 Před rokem +1

    they should have bluetooth on the electrical reader device, the fact that you had to walk from the panel to your device is unnecessary in todays age.

  • @KrispyKremePies
    @KrispyKremePies Před 2 lety

    How much would you charge for this?

    • @ElectricalCodeCoach
      @ElectricalCodeCoach  Před 2 lety

      Just depends on how complex it is probably at least 180 I think this project was 325

    • @KrispyKremePies
      @KrispyKremePies Před 2 lety

      @@ElectricalCodeCoach thanks for replying, I just started your course week 1 and 2! I look forward to my journey, just wanted to say thank you!

  • @MrRay645
    @MrRay645 Před rokem

    what would a job like this cost (I know no way to be exact just rough average) An older home and every window has a dedicated 220 under and we do not have enough 110's. change out one or two of the 220 would make life much easier.

    • @ElectricalCodeCoach
      @ElectricalCodeCoach  Před rokem

      Just depends on your area, you'll have quite a bit in parts each one of those breakers is around $65 a piece now

  • @frankpaya690
    @frankpaya690 Před 2 lety

    You didn't say what to do with the remaining hot wire that you're not going to need anymore, there's two hot wires in a 220?

    • @ElectricalCodeCoach
      @ElectricalCodeCoach  Před 2 lety

      one hot becomes the neutral

    • @turq1966
      @turq1966 Před 2 lety +1

      Was there not a neutral in the box as well? Black, black and white?

  • @Pfannenstiel1987
    @Pfannenstiel1987 Před 2 lety +1

    Why make a DIY if I’m not allowed to perform this fix?

    • @ElectricalCodeCoach
      @ElectricalCodeCoach  Před 2 lety

      We live in a very legalistic society, and I just try to offer education and information

    • @elijahwatson8119
      @elijahwatson8119 Před 2 lety +1

      He's just covering his ass for legal reasons. In almost all areas of the US it's legal to do your own electrical work, though permitting and inspection requirements differ.

  • @russellvaughan4105
    @russellvaughan4105 Před 2 lety

    not clear

  • @debbieanderson6208
    @debbieanderson6208 Před 2 lety

    How can you take a 220 and make it a 240.