Has anyone ever converted a La Marzocco Linea 220V machine from a 3 prong to 4 prong plug? Can you provide some guidance?
Believe it or not I can't find an electrician or appliance technician who will touch this machine.
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Hi Sean. Do you know for sure what the voltage is at the receptacle? Do you have access to a multimeter? Do you know how to take a reading at the receptacle? 208 is a popular voltage in a commercial setting and in some cases you might find 240vac. And if the receptacle has four prongs what are they hooked up to? Single phase or three phase? If it is a three phase circuit then you will have a three pole breaker at the box and three hot leads at the receptacle. If it is a single phase circuit there will be a two pole breaker and two hot leads and a neutral at the receptacle. I mostly need to know if there is a neutral line on the circuit. I also need to know what flavor of four prong plug you have. There should be some numbers printed on it that conform to a NEMA spec, i.e L14-20. We also need to make sure that the circuit has enough juice for your machine. Can you tell me what the breaker is rated and the wattage rating for your machine? Sorry for all the questions. I just don't want to end up giving you info that blows up your machine or starts a fire in the wall.
I can believe it. A regular appliance tech would probably not have run across this situation. You're asking an electrician to improvise a bit, which is not something many are comfortable with.
Is there a particular reason that you are dealing with an appliance technician instead of an espresso machine tech? There's a pretty big difference.
Sorry to hop on here so long after the original post. But a question for Mike Sabol and anyone else who may know:
I have a two group Aurelia I (2010). I am moving into a building with a 220 four-prong outlet (14-30P). My current machine plug is a three prong. I want to confirm that I can connect green wire to the Ground prong, black wire to the X prong, and white wire to the Y prong. Leave the plug's W prong empty. This would give me two hots and a ground, no neutral. Sounds right?
I made this video to show what I'm talking about: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wrtg06im58s
Before I go live with this, I just wanted some confirmation.
Thanks again
Tim Schmoyer
Mike Sabol said:
Alright. The plug rewire is simple. The three wires coming out of the machine are hot-hot-ground. The ground should be green and the hot wires are probably black/white or black/red. On the 14-30P (the plug or male) the ground terminal is the one with the dog leg on it. Neutral is oposite, oftentimes a white or silver color, and the two hot legs are on either side if the Ground/Neutral is Up/Down. Just wire your four prong plug with the hot legs coming from the machine into the hot terminals on the plug. Wire the ground to the ground terminal. Leave the neutral empty. Easy.
I am assuming you bought a functional machine and you just need to plug it in. For a machine that was otherwise operating good on a three prong plug this will work fine. It's not even dangerous. I know that four group lineas needed a 50 amp breaker. At 240 your machine will be pulling the maximum that it's rated for. So you could be close to the limit on your breaker. If you divide the wattage rating by 240 (the volts) that will tell you how many amps you'll be pulling. If it's below 30 you're good.
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