gregor
Member
- Location
- Cincinnati
Am I required to run a neutral wire to the dryer and range?
haskindm said:You have always had to run a neutral to a range. In the old codes you did not have to run a grounding conductor as you were allowed to use the neutral to ground the range. The old codes are dead, you now must install both a neutral and a grounding conductor to ranges and dryers.
Back when these major-ppliance circuits only required 3 wires, the neutral was required to be insulated (meaning that a bare was not used), unless the cable was an SE type, where the bare encircled the others.allenwayne said:Prior to using 10/3 wg & 8/3 wg ,all used 10/2 wg & 8/2 wg IE : 2 hots , 1 grounding conductor.Maybe I`m mistaken but when this was changed I always took it that it was now a requirement to provide isolated grounding and grounded conductors.Since prior was using a bare conductor that was considered the grounding conductor and not the grounded/neutral conductor.
Neither have I, but a dryer circuit would require #8 al SE, which I have seen.dlhoule said:
allenwayne said:Yes but for the norm 10/2 CU was always installed and that is NM not SE.I still say the original way that dryers and ranges were done when 3 wired was to have 2 hots and 1 grounding not grounded conductor