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Duncan Tuna April 24th 05 08:55 PM

Green wire on Dryer?
 
I moved my Kenmore natural gas dryer a few feet back, and noticed a green
wire, connected to a grounding pipe, hanging from the wall.

The end had been, may have been just hanging inside the dryer, not
connecting to anything, but I am not sure.

The dryer is connected to a standard 3 prong power outlet, and the green off
of the power cord *IS* connected to the dryer frame via an external nut. --
This "extra" green wire that I'm concerned about was definately not
connected to the external grounding screw.

So .. anyone know what this "extra" grounding wire is all about? Should I
attach it to the grounding screw on the exterior of the dryer? Or was there
somewhere inside the dryer that it WAS connected to, but is no longer? This
extra wire could have been from a previous dryer that was there. Any harm
in attaching TWO grounding wires to the external screw?

Again, the dryer power cord has a ground, and is connected. So I got that
going for me.

Thanks in advance.



RBM April 24th 05 09:04 PM

Sounds to me like it was from a previous machine. As long as your outlet and
power cord are grounded you are fine
"Duncan Tuna" wrote in message
...
I moved my Kenmore natural gas dryer a few feet back, and noticed a green
wire, connected to a grounding pipe, hanging from the wall.

The end had been, may have been just hanging inside the dryer, not
connecting to anything, but I am not sure.

The dryer is connected to a standard 3 prong power outlet, and the green
off of the power cord *IS* connected to the dryer frame via an external
nut. -- This "extra" green wire that I'm concerned about was definately
not connected to the external grounding screw.

So .. anyone know what this "extra" grounding wire is all about? Should I
attach it to the grounding screw on the exterior of the dryer? Or was
there somewhere inside the dryer that it WAS connected to, but is no
longer? This extra wire could have been from a previous dryer that was
there. Any harm in attaching TWO grounding wires to the external screw?

Again, the dryer power cord has a ground, and is connected. So I got that
going for me.

Thanks in advance.




Appliance Repair Aid April 24th 05 10:37 PM


Duncan Tuna wrote:
I moved my Kenmore natural gas dryer a few feet back, and noticed a

green
wire, connected to a grounding pipe, hanging from the wall.

The end had been, may have been just hanging inside the dryer, not
connecting to anything, but I am not sure.

The dryer is connected to a standard 3 prong power outlet, and the

green off
of the power cord *IS* connected to the dryer frame via an external

nut. --
This "extra" green wire that I'm concerned about was definately not
connected to the external grounding screw.

So .. anyone know what this "extra" grounding wire is all about?

Should I
attach it to the grounding screw on the exterior of the dryer? Or

was there
somewhere inside the dryer that it WAS connected to, but is no

longer? This
extra wire could have been from a previous dryer that was there. Any

harm
in attaching TWO grounding wires to the external screw?

Again, the dryer power cord has a ground, and is connected. So I got

that
going for me.

Thanks in advance.


Hi,

Kinda sounds like the green wire was a ground wire left over from an
older/other dryer or washer. If your outlet is a 3 prong and the ground
is attached ok you shouldn't have to worry about the old ground, remove
it.

jeff.
Appliance Repair Aid
http://www.applianceaid.com/


Beachcomber April 25th 05 07:04 AM

On 24 Apr 2005 14:37:20 -0700, "Appliance Repair Aid"
wrote:


Duncan Tuna wrote:
I moved my Kenmore natural gas dryer a few feet back, and noticed a

green
wire, connected to a grounding pipe, hanging from the wall.

The end had been, may have been just hanging inside the dryer, not
connecting to anything, but I am not sure.

The dryer is connected to a standard 3 prong power outlet, and the

green off
of the power cord *IS* connected to the dryer frame via an external

nut. --
This "extra" green wire that I'm concerned about was definately not
connected to the external grounding screw.

So .. anyone know what this "extra" grounding wire is all about?

Should I
attach it to the grounding screw on the exterior of the dryer? Or

was there
somewhere inside the dryer that it WAS connected to, but is no

longer? This
extra wire could have been from a previous dryer that was there. Any

harm
in attaching TWO grounding wires to the external screw?

Again, the dryer power cord has a ground, and is connected. So I got

that
going for me.

Thanks in advance.


Hi,

Kinda sounds like the green wire was a ground wire left over from an
older/other dryer or washer. If your outlet is a 3 prong and the ground
is attached ok you shouldn't have to worry about the old ground, remove
it.

jeff.
Appliance Repair Aid
http://www.applianceaid.com/


The new US Electrical Code "standard" for dryer connections is "4
wire" not "3 wire". If you have an older installation with only 3
wires (2 hots and a neutral), you are permitted to be "grandfathered"
by using a 3 hole receptacle and an approved 3 wire cord set.

If it is new construction, you must install a 4 hole receptacle with
proper wiring (2 hots, neutral, and ground). The ground must NOT be
connected to the neutral at the dryer.

Beachcomber


Appliance Repair Aid April 25th 05 11:40 AM

Beachcomber wrote:

The new US Electrical code "standard" for dryer connections is "4

"wire"
not "3 wire".


Duncan Tuna wrote:
I moved my Kenmore natural gas dryer a few feet back, and noticed a

green
wire, connected to a grounding pipe,
hanging from the wall.


Except the OP has a gas dryer, not an electric one.

jeff.
Appliance Repair Aid
http://www.applianceaid.com/



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