I've never had a situation to work with that kind of receptacle. Does that (White being hot) sound kosher?
Didn't want him to fix it rather DIY and learn something new and three were other concerns.
As to which receptacle I was needing, 1) the saw and it's motor were right there and 2) I was promised more than once that I'd have the correct receptacle when done. Wiring a 24x36 barn took over a week. The single circuit for the saw was the only "odd" request. Everything else was lights, switches, and plugs.
My concern with the White/Neutral being hot is me wondering if that 30 Amp receptacle is supposed to read that way or is there an internal short
Didn't want him to fix it rather DIY and learn something new and three were other concerns.
As to which receptacle I was needing, 1) the saw and it's motor were right there and 2) I was promised more than once that I'd have the correct receptacle when done. Wiring a 24x36 barn took over a week. The single circuit for the saw was the only "odd" request. Everything else was lights, switches, and plugs.
My concern with the White/Neutral being hot is me wondering if that 30 Amp receptacle is supposed to read that way or is there an internal short
You also can't trust a DMM if your wire runs are very long, their input impedance is usually several megohms so they don't load down what you're testing - I've measured up to about 90 VAC (using a DMM) on wires that were abandoned (neither end connected to ANYTHING) but not removed; but when I loaded them down using a Wiggie the voltage dropped to ZERO.
Inductance isn't ALWAYS your friend, and it pays to have (and understand) more than one test device... Steve
The neutral may not be hot. You couldve been seeing induced or ghost voltage.
Try testing with a solenoid tester such as a wiggy.
^^^^^^This^^^^^
Call the electrician back to change the receptacle and breaker.
It should be free of charge because he agreed to install the receptacle for the saw.
Why is everyone assuming the electrician made a mistake? The op said he "expected" a different plug. If it wasn't specified, I'd say the electrician went above and beyond to run a 4 wire circuit
I can see why this install didn’t end well...
I clicked on this thread to see what the hell a 240 20 amp “socket” was...figured I may learn something about something I never heard of...oh well.
OP may want to hand the electrician the saw plug...and state...I want something to plug this into!![]()

Are you saying sockets, plugs, plug-ins, outlets and receptacles aren’t all the same?![]()

Did he forget to swap out the receptacle? Dunno. Figured I could cope with the swap.
Guess I wasn't clear enough.
My concerns -
why was I seeing the tester telling me there was current on the Neutral/White when I wasn't expecting any.
And
Should I install the "correct" (230/29amp) receptacle on that stranded cabling or swap the plug to fit the receptacle.
I was hoping (silly me ([emoji2955])) that somebody would comment on what kind of a circuit that "twist-lock" receptacle was _appropriate_ for, surely not mine, and whether or NOT my solution was appropriate AND safe.
You also can't trust a DMM if your wire runs are very long, their input impedance is usually several megohms so they don't load down what you're testing
So,,, now what?