g-and-h_electric
Senior Member
- Location
- northern illinois
- Occupation
- supervising electrician
Hey all:
I am doing a small partial kitchen remodel. Basically relocation of a few receptacles, and adding a couple pendant lights. Circuiting for the countertop, refrig, and microwave are actually correct, and adequate.
The electric range receptacle is my "issue". As I am in the Chicago area, it is wired with "greenfield" which goes into the basement and terminates in the old panel box (now a junction box, as the service was updated about 25 years ago). There is no separate grounding conductor run in it (this was common years ago). My quandary is this.... The customer is getting a new range, the old receptacle is a NEMA 10-50 3 wire non grounded. I am thinking that the raceway is adequate for the ground, and I should install a NEMA 14-50 4-wire receptacle.
Anyone see a reason to NOT go with the 4-wire?
Thank you.
Howard
I am doing a small partial kitchen remodel. Basically relocation of a few receptacles, and adding a couple pendant lights. Circuiting for the countertop, refrig, and microwave are actually correct, and adequate.
The electric range receptacle is my "issue". As I am in the Chicago area, it is wired with "greenfield" which goes into the basement and terminates in the old panel box (now a junction box, as the service was updated about 25 years ago). There is no separate grounding conductor run in it (this was common years ago). My quandary is this.... The customer is getting a new range, the old receptacle is a NEMA 10-50 3 wire non grounded. I am thinking that the raceway is adequate for the ground, and I should install a NEMA 14-50 4-wire receptacle.
Anyone see a reason to NOT go with the 4-wire?
Thank you.
Howard