People who joke about legos haven’t stepped on this bad boy

  • absGeekNZ@lemmy.nz
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    5 days ago

    AS/NZS 3112

    I can charge my electric car from a standard outlet. Can add 20kWh overnight, which is plenty for 3 days round town driving.

    230V at 15A on a standard outlet, plug only slightly larger than the American one.

    • SirEDCaLot@lemmy.today
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      4 days ago

      Okay but that’s more talking about the benefit of a 240v system. The question here was the benefit of the giant UK plug. Personally I would argue that 240v to every receptacle is not a major benefit, because very few devices require 3kw+. And in exchange you get a somewhat more hazardous system.
      I am curious if homeowners in NZ are allowed to work on their own wiring? Here in the US you are…

      • absGeekNZ@lemmy.nz
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        4 days ago

        We used to be. The rules changed about 10 years ago.

        A lot of big appliances require higher power. Dishwashers, clothes dryers, fridges.

        Some powers tools, drill press, plainer.

        I never worry about load splitting,.

        The benefit of the AS/NSZ plug, is that it isn’t much bigger than the US plug, but has a higher power density.

        • SirEDCaLot@lemmy.today
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          23 hours ago

          We used to be. The rules changed about 10 years ago.

          I’d rather have 120v wiring I can do myself than 240v wiring that I have to pay someone $hundreds just to replace a light switch.

          A lot of big appliances require higher power. Dishwashers, clothes dryers, fridges.

          Here in US dishwashers and fridges run on <1500w. A fridge should only use a few hundred watts tops unless it’s horribly inefficient. A dishwasher needs power for the heating element but ours do okay on 1500w, although yours probably heat up faster. We use a different plug for clothes dryers, usually a NEMA 10-30 or NEMA 14-30 (30A at 240v), sometimes NEMA 14-50 (50A at 240v) for really big stuff like EV chargers.
          Our power is split phase (two 120v legs, 180° out of phase, so either phase against neutral/ground is 120v, phase A against phase B is 240v). So with those plugs you either get both legs and ground or both legs plus neutral plus ground.

          Some powers tools, drill press, plainer

          Almost all US power tools run on 120v 15A.
          There’s a few really big ones, mostly designed for professional shops, that need some flavor of 240v, usually with a NEMA 6-15 outlet (like normal US outlet but pins are horizontal rather than vertical). These outlets are uncommon outside of wood shops.

          I never worry about load splitting,.

          The only time I’ve ever even considered this is a. charging my Tesla on 120v, or b. running a space heater and a hair dryer at the same time in the bathroom. :)

          Bottom line- yeah NZ system has higher power density but I don’t think the benefits outweigh the loss of ability to work on it yourself.