As an electrician, I hate doing those receptacles. Just for the fact of the #10 wire and trying to shove 10 pounds of crap in a 5 pound box. You did forget to reinstall the 27 layers of paint over the receptacle and plate...lol
Gotta have the ground wire from the panel either way. If you don’t have a metal box it doesn’t need to be grounded on the metal box but please call an electrician for your unique situation
So my home was built in 1994. We just bought a new dryer and figured it would be a good time to convert our 3-prong outlet to the updated 4-prong. When removing the existing outlet, there is a ground wire in the box, so all good there. The issue I’m having is that there is no ground screw in the box or predrilled hole to mount a ground screw. It is a carlon phenolic box - so do I need to ground to the box? Since it’s plastic, I assume it doesn’t need to be grounded? If I do need to ground, will I have to tap and mount my own screw? Thanks for your help!
If that’s the case then it’s a 120V line. Can’t be used for a dryer which requires 240V. Is the wire 10 gauge? It would be very stiff. Without seeing the wiring and if you don’t understand electricity I would call a licensed electrician. And ALWAYS turn the breaker off and test the wires to make sure there is no power. It sounds like your trying to wire a dryer to either a 15 or 20 amp circuit. Can’t do that! You’ll start a fire since the wire gauge is too small. Again, call a licensed electrician.
After reading some of the comments I would advise many here to hire a licensed electrician. If you don’t understand electrical theory don’t try to do this on your own. You could hurt yourself and possibly start a fire.
I only have 3 wires coming from the box but I have a nearby grounded outlet, at 1:43 it says "You have to run a ground wire" Can I pull my new 4th wire (ground) from that outlet or do I HAVE to run it from the panel?
You shouldn’t have to ground to the box if you buy a grounded dryer outlet where the metal from the ground terminal on the outlet connects to the metal plate of the outlet and metal plate is attached to the box. That is what I’ve heard
@@ApartmentMaintenancePro I ran 8 gauge wire for a 14-30 outlet. It’s going to be hard to pigtail the ground with the 8 gauge wire. Can I use 10 gauge wire to pig tail, or does it need to be 8 gauge. That might help
I don't know. I would use a volt meter and see where voltage is present and not present, I would start at the breaker panel. Don't try if you are not familiar working with electricity.