Having moved last week, I am now attempting to unpack,arrange furniture, and in general set up the house. When I attempted to set up the washer and dryer I ran into a problem. The cord on my dryer plugs into an outlet like this
However, the outlet in the laundry room looks like this.
So do I need a new outlet?
Power cord?
Dryer( I hope not, this one’s only 1.5 years old)?
You should be able to find an adapter that will let you plug your 3-prong dryer plug in one end and plug the other end into your 4-prong outlet. If that doesn’t work, you can get one of these and wire it into your dryer.
I’m guessing that you need an adaptor. Print out the pix you linked, take them down to Lowe’s, ask them.
If they give you blank looks, get yourself down to your nearest TrueValue or Ace Hardware–their market niche is “service”, and they hire people who will have time to help you figure out what kind of adaptor you need, if they don’t know already.
You can also try Menard’s, who are Lowe’s competitors and whose market niche is also “service”, and who usually have people who know what stuff is and what it does.
And if THEY all give you blank looks, take your pix down to the nearest electrical supply storefront, ask them.
Before you get an adapter, make absolutely sure that the voltage of the outlet matches the voltage of the dryer. Many driers use 220 VAC, but a few use 110 VAC.
Same thing happened to me…couldn’t find an adapter though, so I got a new cord ($12 I think). Just attach it to the back where the old cord is and match the colors…black on black, white on white (usually in the middle), red on red. As for the green (which, being color blind, I took for gray), I found another green (gray) wire attached to a screw near the cord plate that ran into the inside of the dryer (I think it attached to the white wire on the inside)…stuck it there…no fire, runs great.
Ideally, you’ll have a new cord installed on the dryer.
The old 3-blade “crow’s foot” plugs ground the dryer through the “neutral” conductor, rather than through a proper ground. Normally, the neutral wire is grounded, but this can’t be guaranteed. This used to be standard practice, but is no longer recommended.
To change the cord, you have to be sure to disconnect the “frame jumper” from the neutral terminal. If your dryer is newish, there should be some fairly prominent instructions near the terminals.
gotpasswords is correct. The national electric code changed and dryers now have to use the 4-plug outlets. Changing the cord is pretty easy – should just take a screw driver and maybe a nut driver.
On the bright side, the fact that your new house has the right kind of outlet shows that the electricians knew what they were doing.