The color of the load wire is kind of orange but it is tiger orange.I think it is gray.
This is what the purpose of a switch is. It connects the "hot" wire to the load. When this is done the load becomes energized.
The neutral wire is the return wire back to the distribution panel from the load. Without this return wire no load will work.
Normally wire is sized by the amperage of the load. In this case the wire size is calculated by knowing the length of the run to the load and the amperage of the device to be connected. By knowing the length, the wire size has to be increased to allow for voltage drop over the distance from the supply to the load.
That depends on the load. In other words how many amps does your load utilize or how many watts? Either figure will work. <<>> Wire size is based on amperage. The higher the load amperage the larger the wire size has to be. In this case also, the wire has to be increased in size to over come the voltage drop for the distance to the load. To receive an answer restate the question with the load amperage or wattage.
Red is negavite some black
The line wire will be hot and carrying power when the breaker is on. The load wire will not be hot and will have no voltage on it until it is connected with the line wire.
This is what the purpose of a switch is. It connects the "hot" wire to the load. When this is done the load becomes energized.
The neutral wire is the return wire back to the distribution panel from the load. Without this return wire no load will work.
The Load wire is always hot (black or red wire) and the Line wire is the one that returns to your fusebox (usually white). Answer above is absolutely wrong written by someone who does not know electricity and will get you electrocuted. The white wire is your neutral wire. The black or red coming from the electrical panel is the line wire. the black or red wire going to the next outlet or light fixture is your load wire. in some cases a white wire will be a line or load and should be indicated with black tape on it denoting it is not a neutral. quick recap is Line = power in, load = power out.
When a large load is controlled by a small wire, what device is used?
No, example- If the wire is blue with a white strip, (which is your remote wire for the amp turn-on) the wire is blue, the strip is not the color.
Normally wire is sized by the amperage of the load. In this case the wire size is calculated by knowing the length of the run to the load and the amperage of the device to be connected. By knowing the length, the wire size has to be increased to allow for voltage drop over the distance from the supply to the load.
Wire size is based on the amperage of the load. Without knowing what the motors's full load amperage is, an answer can not be given.
In household wiring it is the "hot" wire that carries current to the load.
That depends on the load. In other words how many amps does your load utilize or how many watts? Either figure will work. <<>> Wire size is based on amperage. The higher the load amperage the larger the wire size has to be. In this case also, the wire has to be increased in size to over come the voltage drop for the distance to the load. To receive an answer restate the question with the load amperage or wattage.
There are for stereo wiring color codes. The red wire is the positive wire. The black wire is a ground wire. The green wire is the speaker wire. The white wire is the auxiliary wire.
Red is negavite some black