Yes-connect the black wire to the brass terminal and the white wire to the silver terminal.
Electrical Energy. When a copper wire is connected to two ends of battery, the electrons on the -ve terminal (with excess of electrons) move to +ve terminal (electron deficit terminal) to maintain an equlilbrium, hence the energy created by these movement of 'electrons' is called 'electrical' energy
It is traditional to use the copper colored wire as the positive. Of course, the electrons don't care what color the wire is as long as you hook it up the same at both ends!
The copper wire glows red. Once it cools...the copper reacts with the air to produce copper(II) oxide. This is shown by the black tarnish on the copper wire.
A high amount of zinc is in oysters, Some in suntan lotion, and some in copper and brass.
Firstly, ensure the item you want to clean, is actually brass. If it isn’t brass, you could end up tarnishing it rather than cleaning. The easiest way to check is to see if a magnet sticks to it. If it’s real brass, the magnet will not stick. If it does stick – do some further investigating and don’t clean it until you’re sure of the metal. Don’t use anything too abrasive on your brass, if you choose to use wire wool, it will need to be a very fine grade. You could end up scratching the surface and causing damage. Try using cotton wool or a soft cleaning cloth to do the dirty work and use another soft cleaning or polishing cloth to get a bit of gleam on your item. visit kernowfurniture.co.uk/blogs/news/how-to-clean-antique-brass for more detail.
Wall receptacles are wired in parallel. black to black, white to white, ground to ground.
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).
INSERT PLUG WIRE IN SERIES WITH NO. 1 CYLINDER AND CONNECT BATTERY + TO RED WIRE AND BLACK WIRE TO BATTERY - TERMINAL
on my older jvc its no problem at all just ground the wire that your radio says to hook up to the ebrake. newer ones and like my pioneer need to have the radio turned on first then ground that wire. trick is --- get a standard universal relay--- like from autozone for your aftermarket driving/fog lights. take the 85 terminal of your relay and hook it to your radios power amplifier wire(usually blue with white stripe), take the 86 terminal and hook it to ground. take the 87 terminal and hook to the same ground, and finally take the 30 terminal and hook it to you radios ebrake wire. simple :-)
If you have standard ceiling speakers (with no transformer), you hook up the speaker wiring, Black to the left terminal, and Red to the right terminal. If you have 70V commercial ceiling speakers (with a transformer), you bypass the transformer by either just using the Black and Red wires off of the transformer, or bypass the transformer by hooking the Black wire to the left terminal, and the Red wire to the right terminal. If you have a 70V commercial speaker system (uses transformers on speakers and a 70V PA amplifier), strip the ends of the appropriate wires you are going to hook up to your 70V system. Do not strip the ends of the other wires you aren't going to be using. Hope this helps! Thanks!
The brass screw is for the hot connection, usually the black wire.; sometimes a red one. The silver colored screw is for the white wire or neutral. If there is a green screw, it's for the ground, usually a bare wire but may also be green.
Test the wire with a meter to determine which wire is your hot, which is your neutral, and which is your ground. Those colors are indicative of a 240v circuit normally, so you may have two hots and a ground. Other wise Hot=Black, Neutral=White, and Ground=Green for placement. On your plug, Black/Hot goes to the brass colored terminal. Green/ground goes to the sometimes green terminal that is off by itself usually at the bottom of the receptacle. The neutral goes to the silver terminal.
The red battery wire goes on the positive + battery terminal no matter which side it is on. The black wire goes on the negative - terminal.
it connects to any positive(hot wire) terminal controlled by key.
The positive wire is the 15 terminal and the wire is BK, Black, The 1 terminal is GR, Green
if it is a 240volt motor it does not matter,
If there is a brass colored screw and a silver colored screw, the BLACK wire will connect to the brass screw. If you can't see a difference, connect the black wire to whichever screw connects to the CENTER contact of the light fixture.