The OP appears to have a built in over which would have been wired into a J box and likely had no plug end on it to begin with.
Most ovens will work without the ground. They do this so you can hook up a 3 prong cord on a new appliance not have to rewire your house when you buy a new appliance. Often the neutral bar is bonded to the ground inside the panel anyhow. that being said...
OP, the red and black should be your hot wires, they would go to the blades on, the white would be your neutral and would go to the center prong, the unshielded wire would be a ground, assuming your is in fact grounded inside the oven, you can pop the panel where the wip leads in and see if it's even connected. If it makes you feel better you can run it to a ground or just leave it disconnected.
Again, the issue isnt with how the oven is wired at its terminals inside the oven.
The issue is with the outlet THAT HAS NO NEUTRAL.
I guess people lack reading comprehension because I already said this numerous times.
And even with the ground being being bonded at the main panel, it still isnt right to have neutral current on a bare conductor or metalic pathways. This creates a shock potential.
Yup. I'm not going to spend time getting testy. Old ovens can be found all the time with 3 wires, not 4. I simple suggested that the OP pull the cover off the electrical feed into the oven to see if there is a diagram to hook up 3 not 4. Thanks.
Dude, either youre not reading what I wrote or u failed to comprehend it.
The issue isnt whether the oven can be wired 3-wire or 4-wire.
The issue is THERE IS NO NEUTRAL ON A 6-50r outlet.
The first thing the OP needs to do is open the j box of the 6-50r.
Ive said all this numerous times!
*facepalm*
