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Yes, infact you can connect the green wire anywhere to the body of the dryer. That is a safety ground that will or is supposed to, take away the risk of getting shocked if one of the hot wires would short tothe body of the dryer anywhere.
not generally there should be a hot, a neutral and a ground for 110VAC if 220 two hot and a ground, if you are reading voltage on your ground, the braker of fuse should have tripped or blown, and you have a component that is shorted.
look at these and only these... power or ground...either your power wire has grounded out somewhere (ud be surprised) or youdont have a good enough ground....i would check the ground first....hopefully this helps
According to the astatic wiring hand book it is not used. I would leave it terminated but long enough that if you find your having noise when you receive you could still ground it. I'm pretty sure you don't need it.
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