Bare neutral for 3 wire range and clothes dryers.

nizak

Senior Member
Terminating 2 existing 3 wire NM cables in a newly installed residential sub panel. One for range one for clothes dryer.
I would say they should terminate on the neutral bar and not the equipment ground bar.
Is that correct.

Thanks
 
The original install was 60 years ago. At that time this was the main panel It was a . (12) circuit QO panel with all spaces except 2 having tandem breakers and some of the tandems were doubled.

Now I’m upgrading to a 30 space . Panel needs to be 4 wire since I’m adding the Emergency Disconnect.
 
Terminating 2 existing 3 wire NM cables in a newly installed residential sub panel. One for range one for clothes dryer.
I would say they should terminate on the neutral bar and not the equipment ground bar.
Is that correct.

Thanks
Are you sure it is NM cable and not SE cable/conductors?
As for the EM disconnect, you can label it "emergency disconnect, not service" and not have to run a 4-wire.
 
We never use the 'em-disconnect', we run a 4-wire for the sub-panel and also those old circuits with any service upgrade, ever since we had rash of issues with them, he explains to the customer its a safety issue.
Older NM that was done correctly has a 3 insulated wires red / black / white and no bare, and for that you can run 10 green externally and ground that way.
Its technically not code in MA though.
 
Terminating 2 existing 3 wire NM cables in a newly installed residential sub panel. One for range one for clothes dryer.
I would say they should terminate on the neutral bar and not the equipment ground bar.
Is that correct.

Thanks
The 3 wire range and dryer circuits were only allowed to the main panel, not a sub-panel. If it's now a sub-panel they need to be upgraded to 4 wire.
 
The 3 wire range and dryer circuits were only allowed to the main panel, not a sub-panel. If it's now a sub-panel they need to be upgraded to 4 wire.
They were allowed if the grounded conductor was insulated. The grounding conductor in NM cable was never permitted to be used as a grounded conductor no matter where the circuit originated.
 
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