dcarr82775
Structural
- Jun 1, 2009
- 1,045
Our old stove died, and when the new one got delivered the guy couldn't hook it up because it has the wrong receptacle in the wall (apparently one meant for a dryer). The required receptacle is a 3 wire (3 flat prongs), and the one I bought clearly states it is not for use on grounded circuits.
The wire in the wall is a 4 wire (2 hot, neutral, and ground). The old receptacle was also a 3 wire and the previous guy has installed both the neutral and ground on the neutral terminal of the receptacle. This seems wrong to me, but I thought I would ask here. I was thinking that I am supposed to hook the neutral and hot wires to the new receptacle, and leave the ground unattached. Is this right or wrong? What should I do?
Thanks
The wire in the wall is a 4 wire (2 hot, neutral, and ground). The old receptacle was also a 3 wire and the previous guy has installed both the neutral and ground on the neutral terminal of the receptacle. This seems wrong to me, but I thought I would ask here. I was thinking that I am supposed to hook the neutral and hot wires to the new receptacle, and leave the ground unattached. Is this right or wrong? What should I do?
Thanks