To do so LEGALLY, the circuit breaker must not be rated at a capacity (in AMPS) greater than the SMALLEST wire.
usually you segregate them. all whites together all blacks together all non-coated copper wires and/or green coated wires together use wire nuts to connect above-mentioned wires together
There is no restriction on different size wires being spliced in the same junction box. If your question involves splicing 8ga. to 10ga, this also is not a problem so long as the circuit allows for 10ga wire.
You need to look at the regulations that apply in your country. If in doubt, use a neutral wire of the same size as the live wire or wires.
The most common way of making an electrical connection is with a device called a wire nut. Solid wire connections should be twisted together with a pair of pliers before installing the wire nut to hold the splice tight. Twisting stranded wire together with a pair of pliers does not allow the wire nut to grip the wires as tight as it should. Stranded wire should be held together side by side (in parallel) and let the wire nut twist the wires together to make a solid splice connection.
Yes, as long as the different wire is of the same size or larger and has the same insulation factor as the original wire.
Different wires come in cross-sections of different size.
A Marr connector is a brand name for a wire nut. They were one of the first companies to make a wire connector and the name in the trade has stuck. When joining wires together it is still referred to marretting the wires together. I prefer B-Caps as more wires can be gathered together. Marretts were made in three sizes 31's, 33'sand 35's. Depending on the size of the wires to be joined together will govern the size of the wire nut.There is a great article on related links below that gives a bit of history as to how they became into being.
usually you segregate them. all whites together all blacks together all non-coated copper wires and/or green coated wires together use wire nuts to connect above-mentioned wires together
Yes. You can twist them together and wire nut them, or solder them together.
It can. You can refer to different coloured wires, or many different types of wire.
Connecting different gauge wires are just like connecting wires of the same gauge. Connect the wires just as you normally would, and then once the you attach the wire nut, give the thinner wire a slight tug to make sure the wire is securely fastened. Usually when attaching fixtures, they are generally stranded wires. Be sure to twist the strands together before twisting them onto the solid wire. Then attach the nut onto them and tighten it securely. Connecting different gauge wires are just like connecting wires of the same gauge. Connect the wires just as you normally would, and then once the you attach the wire nut, give the thinner wire a slight tug to make sure the wire is securely fastened. Usually when attaching fixtures, they are generally stranded wires. Be sure to twist the strands together before twisting them onto the solid wire. Then attach the nut onto them and tighten it securely.
The Ford audio wires consist of five different colors. The red wire is the positive wire. The black wire is the ground wire. The speaker wires are green and yellow. The auxiliary wire is white.
You have to pinch the wires together and then pull it out.
The electrical terminology for this device is a wire nut. If the two #10 wires are solid, twist the two stripped ends together with pliers and apply the nut to the wire ends. If the two # 10 wires are stranded lay the two stripped ends parallel to each other and apply the wire nut. Do not twist the stranded wires together.
Depending on the size of the wire, you can use wire-nuts for the smaller gauges Do not twist solid and stranded wire together when you use wire-nuts. Just lay the exposed conductor side by side and apply the wire-nut. If you wrap the two wires together, it was found, some connections have pulled apart due to the wire-nut not biting into the solid wire as the stranded wire was wrapped around it. Split bolts for the larger sizes and Allen key wire lugs bolted together for big size wire.
You should have black (hot), white (neutral) and bare wire (ground) coming into junction box. The two circuits leaving the box should use the same size wire which should be sized for the branch breaker and you just use a wire-nut to connect all black wires together, another wire-nut to connect all white wires and a third wire-nut to connect together all ground wires. Since you are splitting into two branches, all wire-nuts should have three wires of the same color.
we will introduce you to the enameled wires of different conductors.