The green wire is for ground. You can attach that to any metal part of the frame. The red is the active and coincides with the lefthand prong into the plug and the black in this case should be the Neutral and ciocides with the right prong into the plug as seen standing behind the plug.
No, the wide prong is neutral it is the white wire. The narrow prong is hot it is the black wire. The round prong (in a 3 wire plug) is safety ground it is the green wire.
Green is ground and white is neutral.
all wires should be color coded, that is black-hot, white-neutral, green-ground. national electrical code been in use since the dark ages. if the wires are not colored, take a continuity tester, test from the cord cap to each wire on the opposite end of the cord. the larger straight prong on the cord cap is the neutral, mark it with white tape, the smaller straight prong [parallel to the larger prong] is the hot, mark it black. the " u "shaped prong is the ground wire, the mosat important of the 3. mark it green. on the continuity tester, the light on the tester will light when you touch the correct prong to the correct wire
Black wire to the gold screw, white wire to the silver screw, green wire to the round or U shaped prong screw.
Basically, Your ground prong is essential to protecting you from being in contact with an "unsuspecting Live current flow." It eliminates YOU as the primary grounding to whatever your plug is supplying power to, and sends any current flow, manually drawn (like touching it), into the ground prong. Your feet touching the earth acts as a "grounding" process, but with a ground prong; itself alone acts as the ground for you, allowing you to escape the ability to receive external power.
The forth wire is to ground the body of the dryer. The cord should have red, black, white, and green wires. Red and black are hot, the white is neutral, and green is ground. The red, white, black in that order or reversed, black white, red, should go in a row where they connect to the dryer with the green one probably above it. If the center neutral lug has a bond to the chassis remove it. You have a dedicated wire to replace it now.
To adapt a three prong range cord?æto a four prong outlet you need to remove the screws from the back plate to open the electric access panel. Then, pull out the copper grounding strip attached to the middle terminal. Next, remove the green ground screw from under the terminal block and attach it to the four prong outlet.?æ
The fourth prong grounds the body of the appliance. You can attach it to the frame or simply ignore it.
The second ground prong grounds the frame and shell of the dryer. You can attach it anywhere on the frame if there is not a specific terminal for it, or just ignore it. The two hot and 1 ground should let it function. Do not ignore the green wire or grounding conductor. Remove the bonding jumper from the neutral terminal (grounded conductor, white wire) that bonds the neutral to the metal frame. The screw on the metal frame of the dryer the bond strap connects to is where you want to land the green wire. Save the bond strap you might have to convert it back to three wire in the future.
White is neutral and goes on silver colored screw, black is hot and goes on gold colored screw. The bare or green wire is ground and goes on the green screw.
If you are in north America, black and red go to the main prongs and white to the ground (round prong) . Black and red can be on either main prong.
Place your meter on both ends, same prong.