Current setup:
- An old, hardwired, garbage disposal
- Controlled by a wall switch
- 20A breaker for disposal
I am replacing my garbage disposal and also wanted to add an instant hot water dispenser, but I don't have anywhere to plug it in under the sink.
My idea:
- I bought this new garbage disposal (Specs & Instructions) which says 120 volts, 9.5 Amp (Avg. Load)
- I bought this instant hot water dispenser (Specs & Manual) which says it needs 115 volts, 750 watts, 6.25 amps.
- Remove the disposal wall switch by wiring the connections together and putting a flat wall plate in its place to provide always-on power under sink.
- Add this button switch in an empty faucet hole, to control the disposal
- Add this surface mount box to the back of the under-sink cabinet with the wiring that's currently going to the garbage disposal (in metal conduit), plus a 20A outlet and cover.
Note: My dishwasher is separately hard-wired behind the dishwasher (not sink cabinet) so using that seemed harder.
Questions:
- Is it okay to have both the disposal and the instant hot water dispenser on the same breaker/wiring?
- Any issues with my plan overall?
Best Answer
The main rules that I am aware of (but I am not a professional electrician) are:
With a 20A circuit, 80% = 16A. 15.75A < 16A, so you're good there. Actually, the disposal would likely not count as continuous anyway, but since the numbers work, no problem.
This is where you could get to a problem. 9.5A is under 50% of the total, but more than 50% if rated at 80% for a continuous load. I don't think that is a problem. It is certainly not a problem if you either have both loads hardwired or both using receptacles. However, the instant hot manual only shows plug-in and the disposal only shows hardwired. Unless there are alternatives officially supported by the manufacturer, you should not be switching things around - i.e., don't change the disposal to plug-in or the instant-hot to hardwired. The switch you linked is specifically for use with a receptacle.
My recommendation:
If power goes from circuit breaker to disposal to switch, then you already have power in the right place.
If power goes from circuit breaker to switch to disposal, you will need to run an additional cable between the switch and the disposal and move things around a bit. But unlike many other situations, this should be pretty easy since it is all near the sink and should be easily accessible. We can outline all the specific details if needed.
Below the sink, you will have a box with: