Style 2: Direct wire strain relief
Remove the knockout as needed for the flexible conduit
■
connection.
Assemble a UL listed conduit connector in the opening.
■
A. Removable retaining nut
B. Conduit
Tighten strain relief screw against the flexible conduit.
■
5. Complete installation following instructions for your type of
electrical connection:
4-wire (recommended)
3-wire (if 4-wire is not available)
Electrical Connection Options
If your home has:
And you will be
connecting to:
4-wire receptacle
A UL Listed,
(NEMA type 14-50R)
250 V minimum,
40 A, range
power supply cord
4-wire direct
A circuit breaker
box or fused
3/8"
disconnect
(1.0 cm)
5"
(12.7 cm)
3-wire receptacle
A UL Listed,
(NEMA type 10-50R)
250 V minimum,
40 A, range
power supply cord
A
B
Go to Section:
4-wire connection:
Power supply cord
4-wire connection:
Direct wire
3-wire connection:
Power supply cord
If your home has:
And you will be
connecting to:
3-wire direct
A circuit breaker
box or fused
3/8"
disconnect
(1.0 cm)
3"
(7.6 cm)
4-wire connection: Power Supply Cord
Use this method for:
New branch-circuit installations (1996 NEC)
■
Mobile homes
■
Recreational vehicles
■
In an area where local codes prohibit grounding through the
■
neutral
1. Part of metal ground strap must be cut out and removed.
A. Metal ground strap
B. Discard
C. Ground-link screw
2. Use a Phillips screwdriver to remove the ground-link screw
from the back of the range. Save the ground-link screw and
the end of the ground link under the screw.
3. Feed the power supply cord through the strain relief on the
cord/conduit plate on bottom of range. Allow enough slack
to easily attach the wiring to the terminal block.
A
C
A. Terminal block
B. Ground-link screw
C. UL listed strain relief
D. Power supply cord wires
Go to Section:
3-wire connection:
Direct wire
A
B
C
B
D
9