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A 'voltage' is another name for a potential difference. As the name implies, a potential difference exists between two different points or, in the case of an electrical installation, between the line conductor and the neutral conductor. So the neutral does not 'import voltages'. Voltages exist between the line (hot) conductor and the neutral conductor.

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Q: How are voltages imported into installations through the supply neutral conductor?
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Is blue wire positive?

If you are talking about the wiring of buildings/houses then blue would be a hot with ac current. If you mean wire in electronics then it would also "usually" be a positive but if there is any danger you should never assume. A tester could save you from having to buy a new component or your life.AnswerThe European convention is that blue insulation indicates a neutral conductor, brown, black, or grey insulation indicates a line conductor, and a yellow/green striped conductor indicates an earth conductor.


What is the oscillating neutral in transformer?

An 'oscillating' neutral can exist when the star point of a three-phase, star (wye) connected, secondary winding becomes disconnected from earth (ground) -e.g. if copper thieves have removed the earth conductor or it simply becomes disconnected. This results in a 'floating neutral', in which the phase voltages are no longer necessarily equal to each other (in other words, the three phase voltages have become 'unbalanced') the extent to which depends upon how unbalanced the supplied load is. An 'oscillating' neutral occurs when the displacement of the neutral point changes as it responds to changes in the unbalanced load currents.


What is meant by PEN conductor when referring to earthing of supply system?

Conductor combining the functions of both a protective earthing conductor and a neutral conductor


What are live and neutral and earth wires for?

The correct term for the 'live' conductor is the 'line' conductor. The line conductor has a potential of 230 V (in UK) with respect to the neutral conductor which is at approximately the same potential as earth. This potential difference provides the 'driving force' for the current drawn by the load.


What is a Grounded conductor?

The grounded conductor (Neutral) can be white or gray. The grounding conductor can be solid green, Green with a yellow tracer or bare copper.

Related questions

Can a neutral conductor be broke in a disconnect?

The neutral can be broken in some installations. One example is when wiring explosion proof equipment.


How many voltage 3phase line?

For a three-phase, three-wire, system there are three conductors called 'line conductors', and there is a voltage between any pair of line conductors, so there are three voltages.For a three-phase, four-wire, system there are four conductors: three 'line conductors' and a 'neutral' conductor. So there are three line voltages (voltages between lines) and three phase voltages (voltages between any line conductor and a neutral conductor).


Can a 3 wire system create neutral voltages due to Harmonic distortion?

Yes, a 3 wire system can create neutral voltages due to harmonic distortion. Neutral voltages can also be caused by load imbalance between the two hots. It is normal for neutral to have a voltage differential relative to ground. Neutral is, after all, a current carrying conductor. In a well balanced system, however, there is little (theoretically zero) current in neutral.


What is a line or phase wire?

Although you may hear the term 'phase wire' used in the field, the correct term* is 'line wire', or more properly, 'line conductor'**, and it is one of the three 'hot' (slang) conductors in a three-phase, three- or four-wire circuit (the fourth conductor being a neutral).[*Previous editions of BS7671 Requirements for Electrical Installations, used the term 'phase' to describe the 'hot' conductor. With the publication of BS7671:2008, this reference has at last adopted the correct terminology, and now uses the word 'line' throughout.][**They are called 'line' conductors, because the voltages measured between them are termed 'line' voltages even though, in the case of a delta-connected source, they are numerically equal to the corresponding 'phase' voltages.]


Define earth voltage and neutral voltage?

As the neutral point of an electrical supply system is often connected to earth ground, ground and neutral are closely related. Under certain conditions, a conductor used to connect to a system neutral is also used for grounding (earthing) of equipment and structures. Current carried on a grounding conductor can result in objectionable or dangerous voltages appearing on equipment enclosures, so the installation of grounding conductors and neutral conductors is carefully defined in electrical regulations. Where a neutral conductor is used also to connect equipment enclosures to earth, care must be taken that the neutral conductor never rises to a high voltage with respect to local ground.


What is star connection in datail?

If you can imagine a machine's three phase windings with a common point of connection, thus forming a 'star' shape, with each phase winding displaced from each by 120 degrees. The 'free' ends of the three phase windings are then connected, externally, by wires called 'line conductors', while the common point of connection (the 'star point') is (in the case of generators and transformer secondaries) earthed (grounded) and connected, externally, by a wire called the 'neutral conductor'.The voltages measured between any pair of line conductors are called 'line voltages', and the voltages measured between any single line conductor and the neutral conductor (i.e. across individual phase windings) are called 'phase voltages'. A line voltage is the vector sum of its phase voltages, making in 1.732 times the value of a phase voltage.


Is blue wire positive?

If you are talking about the wiring of buildings/houses then blue would be a hot with ac current. If you mean wire in electronics then it would also "usually" be a positive but if there is any danger you should never assume. A tester could save you from having to buy a new component or your life.AnswerThe European convention is that blue insulation indicates a neutral conductor, brown, black, or grey insulation indicates a line conductor, and a yellow/green striped conductor indicates an earth conductor.


In substation neutral wire is always short with groundwhy we are shorting?

The neutral wire is called a grounded conductor. It is also a current carrying conductor. It carries the unbalance current back to ground. At the substation the neutral is derived at the XO connection at the transformer. It needs to be grounded to earth. If not, you will have fluctuation of voltage on all phase wires to ground. With substations voltages being in access of 5kv in most cases. this fluctuation can be very vast.


What is the oscillating neutral in transformer?

An 'oscillating' neutral can exist when the star point of a three-phase, star (wye) connected, secondary winding becomes disconnected from earth (ground) -e.g. if copper thieves have removed the earth conductor or it simply becomes disconnected. This results in a 'floating neutral', in which the phase voltages are no longer necessarily equal to each other (in other words, the three phase voltages have become 'unbalanced') the extent to which depends upon how unbalanced the supplied load is. An 'oscillating' neutral occurs when the displacement of the neutral point changes as it responds to changes in the unbalanced load currents.


What is the purpose of neutral contactor?

Presumably, you are asking the purpose of a neutral conductor, rather than 'contactor'?A alternating-current supply has two conductors, a lineconductor and a neutral conductor. The line conductor is at system potential (e.g. 230 V in Europe), whereas the neutral conductor is at approximately earth (ground) potential because it is earthed (grounded) at the supply transformer. The neutral conductor acts as the 'return' path to the transformer, carrying the same load current as the line conductor.


What two colors may be used for the ground conductor neutral?

What two colors may be used for the ground conductor (neutral)


What are the property of good conductor?

a good conductor should be electrically neutral.