If you slice a cord to test an appliance motor does it matter which wire goes to which terminal on the motor?

Yes, it does! It all depends on what voltage the appliance motor operates on. The two wires you supply to the motor must be the same as the motor operating voltage For example: You have a 120v appliance motor.

You have a 3-wire cord, 120v. The three wires will generally be: hot, neutral, & ground. You will want to supply the motor leads with hot + neutral IF YOU ARE NOT ALREADY SURE YOU CAN DO THIS JOB SAFELY AND COMPETENTLY REFER THIS WORK TO QUALIFIED PROFESSIONALS If you do this work yourself always turn off the power at the breaker box/fuse panel BEFORE you attempt to do any work AND always use an electricians test meter having metal-tipped probes (not a simple proximity voltage indicator) to insure the circuit is, in fact, de-energized.

The only safe, legal way to connect 4 wire ranges and dryers is with a 4 wire cord set to a 4 wire receptacle fed by a four wire circuit. Adapters and 3 wire cord sets used to connect these appliances are not permitted. A new, four wire circuit and receptacle is the only safe, legal and accepted method to connect these appliances.

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