Yes, before i get flamed, i know this is an old thread....
Actually if polarity was reversed, the dryer would run backwards and the clothes would be wetter at the end of the cycle.
Since most electric dryers have a 120v motor, this wouldnt even be possible.
For CNG, I think one possibility that could be, assuming the washer is properly grounded, is hot and neutral on the dryer terminal block or outlet could be reversed. This would mean that the dryer chassis is hot and when he touches the washer and dryer he is completing a circuit. Also, the heating element(s) would only be getting 120v, thus lending to why the clothes arent drying as fast. But Im not sure if the heating elements would even work on 120v....
Not yet as don't have any electrical testing equipment. Thus not using washer/dryer for now until have electrician check it out. If however, there's affordable tester you'd recommend I might give it a try.
Dont know if youve fixed this issue or not but theres a few different affordable testers u could buy. One is a plug in tester, that has 3 lights and will tell u if the outlet is wired correctly. This will work for the washer outlet:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B002Q3R7HI/?tag=atomicindus08-20
Theres also a GFCI version.
The second tester you could buy is a solenoid type tester, such as a wiggy(I have one made by Sq D):
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B000KII9SM/?tag=atomicindus08-20
or a Fluke digital version:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B000VRHD4S/?tag=atomicindus08-20
Or this Fluke tester, which has an amp probe as well:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0006Z3GZU/?tag=atomicindus08-20
With any of the above, you can verify the voltage between any 2 terminals on the dryer receptacle, to verify that its wired correctly without removing the outlet from the junction box.
Not to bring this back up a again but clearly there's some very smart electrical folks here and I have a question... related to generators that output 240 and 120.
I was looking at a friends (new generator) that had a circular L14-30 (240v) outlet as well as 2 duplex 120V outlets on the gennie. The generator came with a heavy duty extension cord that utilized the 4 prong L14-30 240v output and the other end of the extension cord had 4 - 120V receptacles.
I was trying to figure out which of the 120V receptacles were coming from each individual leg so I could evenly load the 240V out. While doing a continuity check, I found that there were in fact 2 sets (of 2) hot conductors but all 4 neutrals and all 4 grounds were common inside the cord - there was no isolation between the neutrals and grounds.
I find this confusing? I get the current carrying aspect that within a branch circuit- a neutral and ground conductor running in parallel will be at different potentials up to the main neutral and ground buss but my question is- in a typical 120V circuit- doesn't all all neutral current go to ground anyway by virtue of panel bonding?
I guess I don't understand the return current theory with respect to X-former center tap neutral, pole grounding, house grounding arrangement. Could someone explain that?
I see this wasn't entirely answered:
Electricity doesn't return to earth or ground, it returns to its source. So the return current on a neutral is returning to the center tap on the transformer. Sometimes, if the neutral in a service drop has a bad connection(ie. high resistance connection) and the water company comes out and replaces the water meter, they can get shocked because some return current is flowing through the metal water lines(because of the water line being bonded to the neutral bus in the main service) to the ground rod at the base of the pole and on up to the transformer. There is a ground wire that runs up the pole from the ground rod to the center tap on the transformer.