Most motors aren't wired with solid wire. Typically only alternators or electric motors have solid wire.
some motors, like the one in a dryer, require a nuetral. other 220 volt motors only need the two hot legs.
I've wired hundreds if not thousands of 480 volt motors. That should display my ability. It's not rocket science, it's just an electric motor.P.S. Every one I wired worked first time.
if you wire a money, why can't it be that the wire transfer charge be collected to the money which is to be wired itself?
What I did was take the mirrors off the aftermarket mirror's, remove the motor and four wire connection. Take off the stock power mirrors, removed the mirrors, took out the stock motors and wire harness. Installed the stock motors and wire harness into the aftermarket mirrors. Plugged the wire harness back in, wired up the lights and turn indicators on the mirrors and they are working just fine.
Wired networks have a wire that connects them to an internet port, wireLESS networks do not.
If wired properly the ridged wire is the neutral.
The last fixture in a parallel circuit is wired the same as the first. In North America, all of the fixtures are wired black wire to black wire and white wire to white wire. The black wire being the "hot" wire and the white wire being the neutral wire.
the hot and neutral are wired forwards the ground and neutral are wired backwards
wire, wires, wiring, wired.
Motors that use capacitors are single-phase AC motors. The capacitor is used to "start-and-run" the motor. The capacitor is wired between the incoming hot service wire and the "start-and-run" terminal of the motor. The other terminal of the motor is connected to the outgoing neutral service wire. These capacitors are designed to run on AC (two DC capacitors back-to-back) so It doesn't make a difference which way round the two terminals are wired. If the case is metal it is usually grounded to the ground wire. Some motor "start and run" capacitors are plastic-cased so don't need any ground wire.
wire
When something is hard wired, it is wired directly to the house wire. No cord. You just install the smoke detector like you would a light fixture or an outlet.