Sub Panel, Ground Wire, and a Dryer
So I'm planning to put in a 100 amp sub panel that'll have a clothes dryer running off it. Code here says...
"A circuit of 30 amperes is required for an electric clothes dryer (section 220.18). Three insulated #10 wires (plus one #10 ground wire) are required to feed it, and a properly configured receptacle (3 pole with ground rated at 30 amps) is required. Make sure the bond strap between the dryer frame and neutral is removed and the equipment ground wire terminates on the chassis as described for range installations."
I think I understand all of that... normal 2 pole connection, remove the wire that connects to the frame, connect the rest as normal.
The next part says...
"Clothes dryers fed from a sub-panel are also required to have a separate equipment ground wire run to them, with a grounding type receptacle/pigtail employed. In this installation, the factory frame bond must be removed from the neutral terminal of the appliance, and the separate equipment ground shall terminate on the chassis."
So here is my question... I think I still run the 4 wires I normally would (red, black, white, ground) to the receptacle. I also run a separate ground wire to hook to the frame of the dryer. Is that right? Where do I need to run that grounding wire (to the sub panel, the main panel, or the grounding rod)? Does the wire just stick out of the wall in the laundry room?
Thanks,
John