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Originally Posted by estophile
I was originally tempted to tie my two US 120 V hot wires near the Euro outlet, connect them to one side of the Euro outlet, connect the neutral to the ground and ground it. But this seems too easy and I also read that the two phases of US 120V are out of phase with each other, so would it even work?
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NO NO NO!!! Best case scenario is that it will just blow the breaker and it won't work. Worst case depends on how much current your wires can handle and how fast your breaker blows... If you have done it really wrong, then you could generate a bit of heat, and maybe a little light show for yourself.
All you will have accomplished is to short circuit your phases to each other.
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Originally Posted by estophile
I have also seen some advice to the effect that the Euro outlet can be set up with two 120V hot wires like the US outlet and "a well-designed appliance" will handle it OK...whatever that means...perhaps that in a properly grounded appliance, the current would seek the ground and everything would be OK. Might be worth a try using the Euro outlet or by simply installing a proper US 240V outlet and changing the plugs on the appliances.
Any advice on how to proceed would be greatly appreciated!
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In the US a typical 3-wire 240V circuit has two hots (1 from each phase) and a neutral. In this case, the Neutral is really a ground, and does not actually carry any current. If you do the following:
- run an appropriately guaged 3-wire cable from an appropriately sized double-pole breaker in your main breaker box to the outlet in question.
- connect Hot from appliance to one of the hots from the house (black wire).
- connect Netural from appliance to the OTHER hot from the house (red wire).
- connect ground from the appliance to the Neutral from the house (white wire).
It will work - provided the extra 10 volts (typical, sometimes more, sometimes less) doesn't damage your device.
I can give you no advice however on whether this will meet code (although I suspect it will not).
Some of your comments demonstrate a significant lack of understanding in the fundamentals of how AC power works. Before attempting anything, I would suggest educating yourself a bit more.