You need a 220V cartridge fuse block open, not just two 110V fuses. Fusing a 220V device with two 110V fuses at the panel is dangerous and doesn't meet code. If you have a 220V fuse block open, simply wire the two hots to the block, and then wire the neutral and ground normally. If you have fuses make sure the box and the feed can handle a clothes dryer. It may be wise to have an electrician evaluate the system for safety.
The old fuse panels with the screw in glass fuses usually had a handle on the side that operated a disconnect. The disconnect was a knife switch with heavy contacts and knives to handle quite a bit of current. Sometimes it was built into a separate box near the fuse holder but closer to the voltage source than the fuses. Certainly you can back the fuses out, but look for the disconnect first.
Electric tumble dryers appeared in the early 20th century. Industrial designer Brooks Stevens developed the first electric dryer with a glass window in the 1940s. [3]
to many to enumerate without you being more specific.
As long as the glass didn't cut the material, you're probably OK; shake out the glass splinters and wash them, and you should be OK.
If light goes from flint glass into ethanol and the angle of refraction in the ethanol is 27.6, the angle of incidence in the glass is approximately 23.21. This calculation is based on refractive index of pure flint glass being 1.60 and refractive index of ethanol being 1.361.
Two 15 amp glass fuses should be sufficient to run a dryer. That's probably the most common size used. If you're really unsure, start with a couple of 10 amp fuses. If the burn out, them move up to the 15's.
The clothes themselves generally don't undergo any change of state (clothes made of certain polymers in a dryer may undergo a second-order state change by going through their glass transition temperature).
glass tube type fuses.
AGC fuses have glass body. ABC fuses have a ceramic body.
metal and glass
I wouldn't recommend it. Aircooled VW fuses are pointy ended, and the fusebox on an aircooled VW is designed with them in mind. Technically, you COULD replace the fusebox and use glass fuses, but if I was going to all that trouble I'd change to either the modern plastic fuses or to circuit breakers.
clothes : body as blankets : bed clothes : closet as money : wallet clothes : cloth as window : glass clothes : shirt as jewelry : necklace
ABC = Ceramic Body AGC = Glass Body
It depends what type of automatic washer/dryer you are considering. The automatic drop washer/dryer (where the washer is stacked on top of the dryer, a drop door is released and the clothes begin dry cycle automatically), was patented on July 28, 2008 Patent 7404303
Slow, 1/4" glass fuse. Long obsolete. Replaced by Bussmann MDL fuses.
Glass fuses for most Leyland vehicles were 25Amp.
The old fuse panels with the screw in glass fuses usually had a handle on the side that operated a disconnect. The disconnect was a knife switch with heavy contacts and knives to handle quite a bit of current. Sometimes it was built into a separate box near the fuse holder but closer to the voltage source than the fuses. Certainly you can back the fuses out, but look for the disconnect first.