There is no such thing. Two wires cannot generally be connected to four without additional information and possibly additional circuit protection.
just leave the neutral wire as it is and connect the other two !!
Yes, it is referred to as three phase four wire service.
If single phase - 2 wire service > two wires If single phase - 3 wire service > three wires If three phase - 3 wire service > three wires If three phase - 4 wire service > four wires US residential service is usually single phase 3 wire service: Two hots and neutral.
The amperage rating of any wire or conductor is determined by its size or gauge. It has nothing to do with whether it is a two, three or four conductor wire. For example, in basic residential wiring, a 14 gauge wire is rated at 15 amps, a 12 gauge wire is rated at 20 amps, a # 10 is rated for 30A and so forth.
You call an electrician.
To provide conversion between the four-wire handset and the two-wire local loop
There are two circuits on the battery and motor. One wire is take which have four ends. The wire is connected on the desired circuits.
Yes.
You are referrring to the line cord I presume: The cord that connects the telephone set to the jack. A two-wire cord will work for a single-line telephone set. A four-wire cord will support a two-line telephone. If you use a two-wire cord on a two-line telephone set, line two will be dead on the set. A four-wire cord will , of course, work just fine for a single-line set. When you look at the plugs on the ends of the four-wire cord, you will see four small contacts: The middle two are for "line one" and the outer two are for "line two". Sometimes there may me a six-position/contact plug on the ends, with the two outer-most positions not having any wiring connected to them. Line cords also come in 6- and 8- wire configurations for other various types of multi-line analog and digital telephone sets.
just leave the neutral wire as it is and connect the other two !!
Two in series, two in parallel The link below has a couple of diagrams.
red wire, blue wire, green wire and the black wire.
Dont connect the common wire.
i would use the old one as a guide, white to white ,red to red,black to black,if you purchased one you wire your self i would take it back and get one with harness. life is much simplier then.Really some are two wire,some are three and i have even seen four wire ,two wire sense and two wires are a heater circuit.
The amps that a four gauge wire will handle will depend with the thickness of the wire. If the wire is thin, the four gauge will handle 95 amps.
It is the item with the four wire plug on the throttle body.It is the item with the four wire plug on the throttle body.
Yes, it is referred to as three phase four wire service.