Electric dryer plug












1














How do I connect a dryer with a four prong plug to a three prong socket for a Maytag electric dryer?



Is there a converter plug that goes from 4 prong to 3 prong outlet?










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  • Possible duplicate of Dryer Outlet - 4 prong to 3 prong
    – isherwood
    47 mins ago










  • Can you post a photo of the inside of the outlet box for the dryer outlet?
    – ThreePhaseEel
    28 mins ago
















1














How do I connect a dryer with a four prong plug to a three prong socket for a Maytag electric dryer?



Is there a converter plug that goes from 4 prong to 3 prong outlet?










share|improve this question









New contributor




William Harley Wood is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • Possible duplicate of Dryer Outlet - 4 prong to 3 prong
    – isherwood
    47 mins ago










  • Can you post a photo of the inside of the outlet box for the dryer outlet?
    – ThreePhaseEel
    28 mins ago














1












1








1







How do I connect a dryer with a four prong plug to a three prong socket for a Maytag electric dryer?



Is there a converter plug that goes from 4 prong to 3 prong outlet?










share|improve this question









New contributor




William Harley Wood is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











How do I connect a dryer with a four prong plug to a three prong socket for a Maytag electric dryer?



Is there a converter plug that goes from 4 prong to 3 prong outlet?







electrical dryer






share|improve this question









New contributor




William Harley Wood is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









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William Harley Wood is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 3 hours ago









manassehkatz

7,2181030




7,2181030






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William Harley Wood is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 3 hours ago









William Harley Wood

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62




New contributor




William Harley Wood is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





William Harley Wood is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






William Harley Wood is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • Possible duplicate of Dryer Outlet - 4 prong to 3 prong
    – isherwood
    47 mins ago










  • Can you post a photo of the inside of the outlet box for the dryer outlet?
    – ThreePhaseEel
    28 mins ago


















  • Possible duplicate of Dryer Outlet - 4 prong to 3 prong
    – isherwood
    47 mins ago










  • Can you post a photo of the inside of the outlet box for the dryer outlet?
    – ThreePhaseEel
    28 mins ago
















Possible duplicate of Dryer Outlet - 4 prong to 3 prong
– isherwood
47 mins ago




Possible duplicate of Dryer Outlet - 4 prong to 3 prong
– isherwood
47 mins ago












Can you post a photo of the inside of the outlet box for the dryer outlet?
– ThreePhaseEel
28 mins ago




Can you post a photo of the inside of the outlet box for the dryer outlet?
– ThreePhaseEel
28 mins ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















2














There are two solutions:




  • Change the receptacle


The existing receptacle (NEMA 10-30) can be replaced with a new 4-wire receptacle (NEMA 14-30). The catch is that you need to add a ground wire to do this. If the existing wiring is in metal conduit then may be able to use that as a ground path. If the dryer receptacle is in the same room as your main breaker panel then it is easy enough to run a new cable. But if it is "elsewhere" then it may be a bit more complicated. You may be able to retrofit a ground wire to solve the problem.




  • Change the plug


Most dryers can be adapted to a 3-wire cable/plug by replacing the cable/plug and connecting neutral and ground. However, this is not as safe as changing the receptacle and not recommended. There are certain fault scenarios where this could leave you vulnerable to dangerous voltage that would not happen with the new 4-wire receptacle.



For some more info, take a look at:



Dryer Outlet - 4 prong to 3 prong



Issues with 4 Prong to 3 Prong Conversion






share|improve this answer





















  • Rather than answering questions repeatedly, just do the close vote.
    – isherwood
    46 mins ago






  • 1




    @isherwood I hear you. Find an exact duplicate. The one you linked to (which is one of the ones I linked to for more info.) is "3 prong dryer, 4 prong socket". This question is the reverse "4 prong dryer, 3 prong socket". The other one I linked is a bit more complicated because it was in a rental and 4-prong cord already removed. If you can find an exact duplicate (there very likely is one somewhere) then I'll agree with you.
    – manassehkatz
    34 mins ago











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









2














There are two solutions:




  • Change the receptacle


The existing receptacle (NEMA 10-30) can be replaced with a new 4-wire receptacle (NEMA 14-30). The catch is that you need to add a ground wire to do this. If the existing wiring is in metal conduit then may be able to use that as a ground path. If the dryer receptacle is in the same room as your main breaker panel then it is easy enough to run a new cable. But if it is "elsewhere" then it may be a bit more complicated. You may be able to retrofit a ground wire to solve the problem.




  • Change the plug


Most dryers can be adapted to a 3-wire cable/plug by replacing the cable/plug and connecting neutral and ground. However, this is not as safe as changing the receptacle and not recommended. There are certain fault scenarios where this could leave you vulnerable to dangerous voltage that would not happen with the new 4-wire receptacle.



For some more info, take a look at:



Dryer Outlet - 4 prong to 3 prong



Issues with 4 Prong to 3 Prong Conversion






share|improve this answer





















  • Rather than answering questions repeatedly, just do the close vote.
    – isherwood
    46 mins ago






  • 1




    @isherwood I hear you. Find an exact duplicate. The one you linked to (which is one of the ones I linked to for more info.) is "3 prong dryer, 4 prong socket". This question is the reverse "4 prong dryer, 3 prong socket". The other one I linked is a bit more complicated because it was in a rental and 4-prong cord already removed. If you can find an exact duplicate (there very likely is one somewhere) then I'll agree with you.
    – manassehkatz
    34 mins ago
















2














There are two solutions:




  • Change the receptacle


The existing receptacle (NEMA 10-30) can be replaced with a new 4-wire receptacle (NEMA 14-30). The catch is that you need to add a ground wire to do this. If the existing wiring is in metal conduit then may be able to use that as a ground path. If the dryer receptacle is in the same room as your main breaker panel then it is easy enough to run a new cable. But if it is "elsewhere" then it may be a bit more complicated. You may be able to retrofit a ground wire to solve the problem.




  • Change the plug


Most dryers can be adapted to a 3-wire cable/plug by replacing the cable/plug and connecting neutral and ground. However, this is not as safe as changing the receptacle and not recommended. There are certain fault scenarios where this could leave you vulnerable to dangerous voltage that would not happen with the new 4-wire receptacle.



For some more info, take a look at:



Dryer Outlet - 4 prong to 3 prong



Issues with 4 Prong to 3 Prong Conversion






share|improve this answer





















  • Rather than answering questions repeatedly, just do the close vote.
    – isherwood
    46 mins ago






  • 1




    @isherwood I hear you. Find an exact duplicate. The one you linked to (which is one of the ones I linked to for more info.) is "3 prong dryer, 4 prong socket". This question is the reverse "4 prong dryer, 3 prong socket". The other one I linked is a bit more complicated because it was in a rental and 4-prong cord already removed. If you can find an exact duplicate (there very likely is one somewhere) then I'll agree with you.
    – manassehkatz
    34 mins ago














2












2








2






There are two solutions:




  • Change the receptacle


The existing receptacle (NEMA 10-30) can be replaced with a new 4-wire receptacle (NEMA 14-30). The catch is that you need to add a ground wire to do this. If the existing wiring is in metal conduit then may be able to use that as a ground path. If the dryer receptacle is in the same room as your main breaker panel then it is easy enough to run a new cable. But if it is "elsewhere" then it may be a bit more complicated. You may be able to retrofit a ground wire to solve the problem.




  • Change the plug


Most dryers can be adapted to a 3-wire cable/plug by replacing the cable/plug and connecting neutral and ground. However, this is not as safe as changing the receptacle and not recommended. There are certain fault scenarios where this could leave you vulnerable to dangerous voltage that would not happen with the new 4-wire receptacle.



For some more info, take a look at:



Dryer Outlet - 4 prong to 3 prong



Issues with 4 Prong to 3 Prong Conversion






share|improve this answer












There are two solutions:




  • Change the receptacle


The existing receptacle (NEMA 10-30) can be replaced with a new 4-wire receptacle (NEMA 14-30). The catch is that you need to add a ground wire to do this. If the existing wiring is in metal conduit then may be able to use that as a ground path. If the dryer receptacle is in the same room as your main breaker panel then it is easy enough to run a new cable. But if it is "elsewhere" then it may be a bit more complicated. You may be able to retrofit a ground wire to solve the problem.




  • Change the plug


Most dryers can be adapted to a 3-wire cable/plug by replacing the cable/plug and connecting neutral and ground. However, this is not as safe as changing the receptacle and not recommended. There are certain fault scenarios where this could leave you vulnerable to dangerous voltage that would not happen with the new 4-wire receptacle.



For some more info, take a look at:



Dryer Outlet - 4 prong to 3 prong



Issues with 4 Prong to 3 Prong Conversion







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 3 hours ago









manassehkatz

7,2181030




7,2181030












  • Rather than answering questions repeatedly, just do the close vote.
    – isherwood
    46 mins ago






  • 1




    @isherwood I hear you. Find an exact duplicate. The one you linked to (which is one of the ones I linked to for more info.) is "3 prong dryer, 4 prong socket". This question is the reverse "4 prong dryer, 3 prong socket". The other one I linked is a bit more complicated because it was in a rental and 4-prong cord already removed. If you can find an exact duplicate (there very likely is one somewhere) then I'll agree with you.
    – manassehkatz
    34 mins ago


















  • Rather than answering questions repeatedly, just do the close vote.
    – isherwood
    46 mins ago






  • 1




    @isherwood I hear you. Find an exact duplicate. The one you linked to (which is one of the ones I linked to for more info.) is "3 prong dryer, 4 prong socket". This question is the reverse "4 prong dryer, 3 prong socket". The other one I linked is a bit more complicated because it was in a rental and 4-prong cord already removed. If you can find an exact duplicate (there very likely is one somewhere) then I'll agree with you.
    – manassehkatz
    34 mins ago
















Rather than answering questions repeatedly, just do the close vote.
– isherwood
46 mins ago




Rather than answering questions repeatedly, just do the close vote.
– isherwood
46 mins ago




1




1




@isherwood I hear you. Find an exact duplicate. The one you linked to (which is one of the ones I linked to for more info.) is "3 prong dryer, 4 prong socket". This question is the reverse "4 prong dryer, 3 prong socket". The other one I linked is a bit more complicated because it was in a rental and 4-prong cord already removed. If you can find an exact duplicate (there very likely is one somewhere) then I'll agree with you.
– manassehkatz
34 mins ago




@isherwood I hear you. Find an exact duplicate. The one you linked to (which is one of the ones I linked to for more info.) is "3 prong dryer, 4 prong socket". This question is the reverse "4 prong dryer, 3 prong socket". The other one I linked is a bit more complicated because it was in a rental and 4-prong cord already removed. If you can find an exact duplicate (there very likely is one somewhere) then I'll agree with you.
– manassehkatz
34 mins ago










William Harley Wood is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










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