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Black wire to gold screw terminal, white wire to silver screw terminal, ground wire to ground terminal. I am sorry, I can't even begin to answer this question. I don't what you are trying to do and I am positive you don't either. Call a pro, please...pkazsr
A L14-20P is a 3 pole 4wire 125/250 volt grounding plug. The four wire (white, red, black and green) cable connection will be, white wire to the W terminal, red to the X terminal, black to the Y terminal and green to the G terminal. The X and Y terminals wires (red and black) can be interchanged so that there is no cross over of the conductors as they protrude from the cable jacket.
The gold terminal
House wire is "line" Black & White house goes to Black & White of Timer; the "load" (e.g. Pond Pump, etc.) is connected to the Red & White. Specifically, put all 3 whites together (nut or terminal); House (source)(line) Black to Timer Black; and "load" Black to Timer Red. The Red wire is the "Timed" (switched) hot wire.
Yes, that is the correct connection.
Yes-connect the black wire to the brass terminal and the white wire to the silver terminal.
Wall receptacles are wired in parallel. black to black, white to white, ground to ground.
Black wire to gold screw terminal, white wire to silver screw terminal, ground wire to ground terminal. I am sorry, I can't even begin to answer this question. I don't what you are trying to do and I am positive you don't either. Call a pro, please...pkazsr
You don't say what you are connecting to the battery. If you have a black and white wire the best guess would be white to negative terminal and black to positive terminal. If you were connecting a 6V light bulb it really doesn't matter.
In typical American wiring the black wire on an outlet goes to the gold (copper) screw and the white wire goes to the silver screw. The ground wire goes to the green screw.
In a household circuit, with a "hot" conductor insulated black and a white neutral, the black wire should connect to the center terminal of the socket. The outside part of the socket usually has a brass screw (for the black wire) and a nickel screw (for the white wire).
A L14-20P is a 3 pole 4wire 125/250 volt grounding plug. The four wire (white, red, black and green) cable connection will be, white wire to the W terminal, red to the X terminal, black to the Y terminal and green to the G terminal. The X and Y terminals wires (red and black) can be interchanged so that there is no cross over of the conductors as they protrude from the cable jacket.
The gold terminal
House wire is "line" Black & White house goes to Black & White of Timer; the "load" (e.g. Pond Pump, etc.) is connected to the Red & White. Specifically, put all 3 whites together (nut or terminal); House (source)(line) Black to Timer Black; and "load" Black to Timer Red. The Red wire is the "Timed" (switched) hot wire.
It doesn't really matter, as long as you connect them to the same polarity at both ends. Most people use the gold or reddish-copper wire as the positive, as it is the red terminal and the silver, or non-colored lead to the negative as it is black.
Yes, that is the correct connection.
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.