ok if there were 100 people and there
If you are talking about a 4-wire branch circuit you'll need to start with a 220 VAC breaker. It will have two terminals. Connect black and red wires to the two terminals. Doesn't matter in which order you make this connection. The white wire goes to the neutral bus bar where all other white wires are connected. The green or bare wire goes to ground bus where other bare wires are connected.
Black and Red are hot (2 slots ), white neutral , bare copper (or green) is grounding. The answer is correct, but to carify a bit...Red and black are connected to the brass colored terminals, white to silver and green or bare to the green terminal.
If the cable you are trying to connect the dryer up to only has a white, black and ground wire, then the dryer is not going to work. The cable needs to be a three wire, the ground wire is never counted when discussing house wiring. Open up the electrical access panel on the back of the dryer. You will see a terminal block. A red and black and white connect to this terminal strip. The "hot" wires are connected to the outside terminals. The neutral (white) wire will be in the center. Connect the ground wire to the frame of the dryer. It is very important that this ground wire be connected as this is the wire that carries the fault current to trip the breaker should a fault arise.
Those two are unrelated.
There is not enough information to answer this question.
That is how you connect 2 batteries in parallel. Like terminals are connected together. With this arrangement you still just have 12 volts, but the amperage doubles. You should also see the 2 positive terminals connected together. If not, then you may have a combination of parallel and series.
potential difference between two points in a circuit
(Note: this is US information. Other countries may use other color codes; consult an electrician in your local area.) Standard color coding for single-phase electrical wiring is that the neutral wire is white and the "hot" wire is some other color, usually but not always black. If the switch has instructions or a wiring diagram, follow that. If not, normally the white wire should be connected to the lighter (silver colored) terminals on the switch and the "hot" wire should be connected to the darker (brass colored) terminals. Some switches interrupt both electrical paths, and in those the terminal screws may be the same color and it doesn't matter which wire goes to which set of terminals (just don't cross them). If there are green terminal screws, those are for the green grounding wire.
Connected to the negative post of preferably anyplace on the engine.
under the hood, closer to the windshield, you have to slide over a black cover to the left to reveal the battery terminals
It would usually be black
A: If its polarized it will have a bar running along side of the body, A grade capacitor will either have stamped a -+ on it terminal and occasionally a red and black paint dot red is positive. If there is none of these marking then it is not polarized and does not matter how it is connected
There are seven steps on how to check the CDI and the starter on a 200cc ATV. Some of the step-by-step instructions are turn the ATV off, use a voltmeter to get a reading on the battery, and then touch the black wire from your voltmeter to the black terminal on the battery.
Positive=+= red Negative=-=black.
If you are talking about a 4-wire branch circuit you'll need to start with a 220 VAC breaker. It will have two terminals. Connect black and red wires to the two terminals. Doesn't matter in which order you make this connection. The white wire goes to the neutral bus bar where all other white wires are connected. The green or bare wire goes to ground bus where other bare wires are connected.
Your 2 switches will have 3 terminals each. One will be copper colored and two black. You will require a 12-3 WG wire between the switches. The Travelers: The black terminals will be connected together one from switch a to switch b and the other from switch a to switch b, it does not matter which black terms you choose to go from switch a to b The brass terminals one will go to the light switch a and the other to a power source switch b.
The method may differ slightly from model year to model year, but it should be a fairly simple job. First off, you need to disconnect the negative (-/black) cable, then the positive (+/red) cable from the battery terminals and move them out of the way. Then, if there is a retainer bracket in place to hold the battery down, remove it. Now you should be able to lift the battery out. To install a battery, use the reverse process.Note: for your safety: you should use gloves and eye protection. The cables should be (dis)connected in the order specified (disconnect negative first, reconnect negative last). You should also be careful not to let anything connect between the two battery terminals.