A NEMA 14-30P is a plug. A 14-30R is a 3pole 4wire grounding receptacle for 125/250 volts. To wire the receptacle connect a three wire cable's red and black wires to terminals X and Y respectively. Connect the cable's white wire to the W terminal and the ground wire to the G terminal.
A Nema L5-30 receptacle is similarly wired like a standard receptacle except all wires are sized to #10 including the ground and supplied by a 30 amp single pole breaker. It has a neutral (white) to pin W, hot (phase color) and ground (green) to pin G.
The L indicates that it is a lock type receptacle, so the face is circular with 3 openings in a concentric shape. <><><> As always, if you are in doubt about what to do, the best advice anyone should give you is to call a licensed electrician to advise what work is needed. Before you do any work yourself,
on electrical circuits, equipment or appliances,
always use a test meter to ensure the circuit is, in fact, de-energized. IF YOU ARE NOT ALREADY SURE YOU CAN DO THIS JOB
SAFELY AND COMPETENTLY
REFER THIS WORK TO QUALIFIED PROFESSIONALS.
L5-30R is specifically a 125Vac, 2 pole, 3 wire locking receptacle. It would be wired the same as a standard 5-15(aka standard 3 prong), except a larger wire guage is typically used back to the service panel. The receptacle itself will be color coded black, white/nuetral, and always green/ground.
An L5-20P is a two pole three wire grounding 20 amp, 125 volt plug . The neutral wire is connected to the W terminal, the ground wire to the G terminal and the hot wire to the only terminal that is left.
Wiring a duplex receptacle
Looking at the duplex receptacle from the front side directly on, you should see a larger blade hole (silver) on the left, smaller (brass) blade hole on the right and a U shaped ground blade on the bottom. The white wire connects under the left (silver) coloured screw, the black wire connects under the right (brass) coloured screw and the green wire under the green ground screw. Wiring a group of receptacles together requires them to be paralleled together. White to whites, black to blacks and ground wire to ground wires.
The neutral wire is connected to the W terminal, the ground wire to the G terminal and the hot wire to the last terminal. The small blade is neutral (white), the larger blade is hot (black) and the notched blade is ground (green).
This is a 277 volt AC plug. It is classed as a two pole three wire grounding plug. Green wire on the G terminal screw, white wire on the W terminal screw and the "hot" wire on the remaining screw.
Green is earth ground ,usually has a L shaped .
White is NEUTRAL
red Hot
black hot
The following are the most commonly used wiring enclosures. NEMA 1, NEMA 12, NEMA 3R, NEMA 4, NEMA 7, NEMA 9
Our NEMA (like in NEMA 3R) stands for the National Electric Manufacturers Association.
No, you cannot use a NEMA 6-20 heater on a 10-30R outlet. The NEMA 6-20 outlet has two flat pins and one round pin, while the 10-30R outlet has two flat pins and one L-shaped pin. The shape and configuration of the pins are different and not compatible, so they cannot be used together.
Just firmly connect the wires under the screws and that will couple them. Each outlet has two hot and two neutral screws; just connect the wires appropriately and make certain that the outlet is properly grounded.
They are both cable tray standards. NEMA VE-1 deals with the manufacturing of cable tray and NEMA VE-2 deals with the installation of cable tray.
You don't.
The following are the most commonly used wiring enclosures. NEMA 1, NEMA 12, NEMA 3R, NEMA 4, NEMA 7, NEMA 9
Our NEMA (like in NEMA 3R) stands for the National Electric Manufacturers Association.
No, you cannot use a NEMA 6-20 heater on a 10-30R outlet. The NEMA 6-20 outlet has two flat pins and one round pin, while the 10-30R outlet has two flat pins and one L-shaped pin. The shape and configuration of the pins are different and not compatible, so they cannot be used together.
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Just firmly connect the wires under the screws and that will couple them. Each outlet has two hot and two neutral screws; just connect the wires appropriately and make certain that the outlet is properly grounded.
There are two different electrical outlets for North America. The first, electrical outlet A, is used in North America and Japan. It is 2 blade NEMA 1-15 ungrounded. The second, only used in America, is 3 pinned NEMA and both are 15A/125V.
They are both cable tray standards. NEMA VE-1 deals with the manufacturing of cable tray and NEMA VE-2 deals with the installation of cable tray.
It's probably more difficult than you might expect. I'm assuming you have a NEMA 5-15R outlet, and you want to plug in a dryer that has a NEMA 14-30P plug at the end of its electric cable. The NEMA 5-15R outlet is by far the most common type of outlet in North America. It has two flat slots (hot and neutral), and a round safety ground hole. It is rated for 15 A and 125 V. On the other hand, most electric clothes dryers have an electric cable with a NEMA 14-30P plug on the end. It has two flat slots (2 hots from 2 different phases, each one 120 V from neutral, and each one rated at 30 A), an L slot (neutral), and a round safety plug. It is possible for an electrician to "fish" a electric cable carrying the necessary phases through the wall from the fuse box to that outlet, and then pull the old outlet and install a new outlet. If one merely did that last part -- pulled the old outlet and placed a new outlet -- without the proper electrical cables in the wall behind it, then the dryer would probably blow the fuse at the fusebox every time it was turned on.
If you connect 110V xbox one to a 220V outlet, only the power supply will burn and not the Xbox one.