White.
No !
white. Screws on that side (neutral) should be silver. "Brass" side gets the Black (hot) wire.
White is the neutral wire. Black is hot, green is ground.
You don't. A ballast with a 347 volt input is a commercial ballast. The 347 volts comes from a 600 volt three phase four wire Y system. You can change the ballast out to a 120 volt and rewire the unit but in most cases it is cheaper to buy a completely new lighting fixture.
In the US and Canada, 10 Guage wire will suffice
No !
With a voltmeter Keep volt meter terminal on phase and neutral wire and it will show the exact volatage
No. They are two different voltage and amperage rated pieces of equipment. Also, a dryer does not use a common (neutral) wire. It uses two separate 110 volt legs, and a ground. The washer uses only one 110 volt leg, a neutral, and a ground.
Hot, neutral and ground.
white. Screws on that side (neutral) should be silver. "Brass" side gets the Black (hot) wire.
A breaker is based on wire size, as the breaker protects the wire and not the load. This is a voltage drop question. A #3 copper conductor will limit the voltage drop to 3% or less when supplying 60 amps for 110 feet on a 110 volt system.
White is the neutral wire. Black is hot, green is ground.
You don't. A ballast with a 347 volt input is a commercial ballast. The 347 volts comes from a 600 volt three phase four wire Y system. You can change the ballast out to a 120 volt and rewire the unit but in most cases it is cheaper to buy a completely new lighting fixture.
In the US and Canada, 10 Guage wire will suffice
it is likely that a floating neutral is the cause of this problem
I hope not, it'll cook the 12 volt DC system.
France uses 220-240 volts for their electrical system.