Byter:
The White neutral wire was always one of the three wires in the cable along with two blacks or one black & one red wire, all AWG No.10 copper.
It is the AWG No.10 Green ground wire that has been added.
Byter & Eagle:
To my knowledge the only thing that the plug on the dryer & the receptacle in the cable going back to the Power Panel added was the green AWG No.10 ground wire.
To my knowledge, I have NOT found anything specific in the 2002 NEC Code referring to the new four wire connection.
I have found data in Handymanwire Expert Forums showing the three & four wire connectors. This is the URL:
http://www.handymanwire.com/cgi-bin/handymanwire/ubb/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=
get topic&f=2&t=001356
In the old three wire setup, the white neutral served as the return & the equipment ground. This is no longer the case.
In the new setup, I do not know whether the dryer is using the white or green wire for the return of the 220-volt circuit or for other returns for dryer lights or any other circuit using 120-volts.
It would be my opinion that the return for any 120-volt circuit would be the White Neutral.
That way the only time that the green wire would carry current is if there is a malfunction in the dryer or a short.
Eagle:
You can connect up your dryer with only three wires using your existing cable. Just be sure that you connect the black wire to the 'X' connector, the red wire to the 'Y' connector & the White wire to the 'N' connector in the old Plug.
Run an AWG No.10 bare copper wire from the frame of the dryer to the cold water line in your washroom with a suitable copper clamp. That will serve the same purpose as the green wire that would normally be connected from the 'G' terminal of the plug via the four wire receptacle back to the power panel.
If you decide to leave the four wire plug on the dryer please find a way to run a separate AWG No. 10 green wire from the receptacle back to the power panel. Connect it to the 'G' terminal on the four wire receptacle & the grounding Bussbar in the Power Panel.
You can run this wire through wire mold on the outside surface of you wall up into the ceiling. Somehow you ought to be able to fish it from there to your Power Panel without tearing up too much of your finished basement.
[This message was edited by donaldekliros on 08-30-02 at 06:17 PM.]