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Most 240 volt circuits are dedicated. You don’t need to worry about sharing with the sprinkler plugs or any other typical 120 volt circuit nearby - they are likely completely separate.Do I need to have an electrician check that it is on dedicated circuit or be concerned about the sprinkler plug next to it, possibly sharing power?
If it was installed correctly, you shouldn't need to check anything. You should find a double pole 20A breaker in your electrical panel that will be feeding this receptacle. You can safety flip it off and see if any other circuits are impacted. If they are, then its time to see an electrician. By code, all 240V circuits should be on a dedicated breaker. So the 20A double pole breaker should only be powering this receptacle.Do I need to have an electrician check that it is on dedicated circuit or be concerned about the sprinkler plug next to it, possibly sharing power?
I don't think this is true. There are lots of rules for situations that require dedicated breakers, most large fixed appliances in a residence do, but I'm not aware of a general prohibition on multiple 240V outlets on a circuit unless, I believe, any single load exceeds 80% of the circuit capacity. (A car charger will almost certainly trigger this).By code, all 240V circuits should be on a dedicated breaker.