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What I discovered was its not the stove, its your house. Depending on when your home was built, determines whether you use a cord that has three or four prongs. I read the booklet that came with the stove and could not find the answer. You can put on a cord or hard wire it directly. The answer I wanted was which cord, three prongs or four. When I was at the store looking at the cords, there was the answer on the cord. If my house was built before the mid 90's I could use a three prong, after 2000 use the four prong. I was remodeling my kitchen and the old stove was hard wired so I did not have the outlet to look at, if you do have the outlet to look at, snap a picture and take that to the hardware store and match it that way. Just make sure you buy a range cord, not a dryer cord. Hope this helps
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.This appliance must be installed and grounded on a branch circuit by a qualified technician in accordance with the National Electrical code ANSI/NFPA NO. 70 - latest edition. All wiring should conform to Local and NEC codes. This range requires a single-phase, 3 wire, A.C 120/208 V or 120/240 V 60 Hz electrical system. Use only a 3-conductor or a 4-conductor UL- listed range cord with closed-loop terminals, open-end spade lugs with upturned ends or similar termination. Do not install the power cord without a strain relief. A range cord rated at 40 amps with 120/240 minimum volt range is required. If a 50 amp range cord is used, it should be marked for use with 13/8" diameter connection openings. This appliance may be connected by means of a conduit or power cord. Additional installation information can be found in the owner's manual which is downloadable here: https://www.lg.com/us/support-product/lg-LTE4815ST#manuals ^CP
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