No. They are two different voltage and amperage rated pieces of equipment. Also, a dryer does not use a common (neutral) wire. It uses two separate 110 volt legs, and a ground. The washer uses only one 110 volt leg, a neutral, and a ground.
As long as the new dryer has the same plug configuration as the old one, just plug it into the same receptical that the old dryer was plugged into.
That is the gasket. XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX A gasket or washer is NOT required on a tapered seat spark plug.
The main benefits of a mini washer dryer, would be the size. A mini washer dryer can do the same as a full size washer dryer machine, only in smaller quantities. That's one drawback. On the plus size, a smaller machine will draw less energy and water. It will also take up a lot less space in your apartment or house. For people with very limited space, mini washer dryers are a must.
At least the same capacity, if not a little larger. Never smaller.
They do make washer and dryer combos in the same chamber; LG has the most popular, Summit and Aniston have also started to break into the market.
Maybe...... as long as they have the same outlets/plug-ins.
The place you buy if from may do it for free, if new, or charge a small fee of $50-100.oo or less. If you hire a handy man that could vary. Both appliances come with directions how to hook up. The washer is easier than the dryer. You have a hot and cold line that connects from the washer to the spickets behind the washer, they are marked on the hoses. There is another hose that goes in the back of the washer that goes to the same spot that drains the water out on the spin cycle and a plug. On the dryer there is a plug and the vent hose that goes from the back of the dryer to the vent hole in the floor or wall. Takes less than an hour to do both. This is IF you have hook-ups already in place for a washer and dryer. If not, the costs are going to be a lot more significant. The cost depends on where you are putting the washer and dryer. If plumbing and electrical lines are close by it might run you about $400-500 for everything. (water lines to the washer, drain for the washer, electrical to the dryer and vent for dryer) However, it can be several hundred dollars more if you need to run plumbing and electrical lines significant distances (20 ft or more). To make it the cheapest possible, pick a location where water lines and an electrical box are less than 10 ft away. Also, if you do it yourself, you can save a lot of money and might only spend $100-200 in materials.
no, it takes the same socket as the others. most likely something is down in the hole next to the spark plug
if you mean the plug which you insert into an electrical socket, then you just pull it out. the same goes for the cable which is inserted into the camera
No :) A chipset is an electronic chip located on the board which manages the motherboard and processes some data. A socket is a type of female plug on which you plug a removable electronic chip (CPU for example)
Your 110 volt washer receptacle sounds like it is not a dedicated circuit directly fed from the distribution panel as it should be. It sounds like someone has tapped off of one side of the dryer receptacle hot and neutral terminals and run them to the receptacle for the washer. If true, this would have been done in the back side of the dryer receptacles which is located in the wall. You best get it checked out because it is likely the wire feeding the washer receptacle is a #14 rated at 15 amps and is undersized for a 30 amp breaker. A #10 wire has the capacity to be connected to a 30 amp breaker which you should find the dryer's connection to be.
In electronics - it's a socket that has a thread on the outside - so that a plug with the same thread can be screwed into it, thus preventing accidental removal. One example would be the connector in your house for cable TV. The box on the wall has a threaded 'stud' socket - into which is screwed a plug, attached to the cable which goes to your TV.