9

I am swapping out an old dishwasher that was hard-wired to a new dishwasher that requires an outlet. As you can see in the picture, the original unit was connected to a cable that goes into the wall.

I was thinking of converting the cable to an outlet by...

  1. Strapping the cable to the wall (using a hole strap) and feeding it behind the cabinet to underneath the sink.
  2. Connect the cable to a 20 amp outlet (do I need a GFCI?).
  3. Housing the outlet in a raised ground electrical box and mount it to the wall underneath the sink.

The new dishwasher make and model is Beko DDS25842X. I am wondering if it just easier to hard-wire this? I couldn't find any information online if this is possible for this model.

wall

outlet

box

isherwood
  • 158,133
  • 9
  • 190
  • 463
takoyaki
  • 91
  • 1
  • 1
  • 4

3 Answers3

6

I think your methodology is sound. You want to make sure the plug and outlet is accessible so putting it under the sink is the way to go. When you mount it be sure to secure it to a stud and away from anywhere that could be exposed to water. This means away from the shutoff valves and not directly under the sink supply connections. Cable straps will hold the metallic cable in place. Make sure that you use enough straps that the cable is secure to the wall studs under the sink and not loose or attached to the flooring. Based on your picture you can probably do this without trimming the cable.

Take out the appropriate knockout and using the connector to secure the cable run the cable and wires into the box. Secure the connector with the locknut. Connect the hot (black) wire to the brass screw and the white to the silver. Green goes to the ground.

You shouldn't need a GFCI on this but check codes.

Many dishwashers that come with a wall plug also have alternate instructions for hardwiring. The Beko installation manual doesn't offer that as an option but you might want to contact the manufacturer to see if it is recommended.

isherwood
  • 158,133
  • 9
  • 190
  • 463
HoneyDo
  • 9,550
  • 4
  • 15
  • 38
3

You pretty much "got it right". Whether you are required to use a GFCI or not is often the requirements of the local code and which code version is being enforced. I don't believe a GFCI is required for a DW in the 2017 code. But if you wanted to be extra safe, it can't hurt to install one. You may get nuisance trips.

George Anderson
  • 23,304
  • 5
  • 41
  • 83
2

I agree with the above. Still, it might be easier to hard-wire, similar to old DW. To check if you can do this, tip the new one to the side and trace how its power cord terminates. I'd bet it has the same 3 screws (usually located behind the front kick panel - so it is easy to reach when installing or removing). Then all you have to do is: release the power cord, put DW in place, feed the flex conduit under it to front, connect and tighten. A lot easier when you have one side fully open :).

P.S. the circuit feeding the DW might already have a GFCI breaker!

Astrogator
  • 401
  • 3
  • 12