These colour wires are used in European and UK wiring. The blue wire is used to the identify the neutral conductor and the brown wire is used to identify the "hot" conductor.In Canada and the US. The white wire is used to the identify the neutral conductor and the any colour but green is used to identify the "hot" conductor.
Brown is the "hot" wire and blue is the neutral on a UK 220 volt power system.
In a flexible cable, the brown is the "line" voltage and blue is "neutral", often tied to ground at the mains panel. In fixed cables, i.e., "behind the walls", the UK wiring standard changed in 2004, where it now MATCHES the flexible cable: brown is line, blue is neutral. Prior to that, blue, red or yellow were acceptable LINE conductor colors and black was neutral.
Easy: make sure both ends of the cable are completely disconnected. Go to one end of the cable, twist 2 cores together for instance brown and blue. Now go to the other end of you cable and test the continuity between the brown and the blue cables. This will verify both of these cables are continuous.Now untwist the cables, and twist another pair together, say brown and green/yellow. Test again between these cable and you're done.If you are fault finding, you can use this to figure out which cable is broken.Say you get no continuity between brown and blue.Set the test up again, test brown to green/yellow and you get nothing again.Set the test up again, test blue to green/yellow... assuming you get a continuous signal here you can assume you have a problem with your brown wire.
Answer for UK, Europe and countries running a 50 Hz supply service.It all depends on which connection you are using. Alternating Current (AC) or Direct Current (DC). In AC there are generally two modes of transmission. Single Phase or Three Phase. In case you don't have 3-phase connection just combine yellow and green.According to Standard, Green is for the Earth Wire and Red is for the Live wire. Blue or Black is for the Neutral Wire. So best option is to combine the Yellow and Green.
Blue - Neutral Brown - Life Yellow/Green - Earth
Brown wires are typically used for live or hot wires, blue wires are used for neutral wires, and green wires are used for grounding in electrical installations.
The color combination of the blue, yellow, and brown wires in an electrical circuit is typically used for specific purposes, such as blue for neutral, yellow for earth/ground, and brown for live/hot.
No, typically red wires are connected to hot/live wires and black wires are connected to neutral wires. Blue wires are often used for connecting to neutral wires as well. Remember to always follow the wiring instructions provided with your specific light fixture.
yes,because its a primary color
These colour wires are used in European and UK wiring. The blue wire is used to the identify the neutral conductor and the brown wire is used to identify the "hot" conductor.In Canada and the US. The white wire is used to the identify the neutral conductor and the any colour but green is used to identify the "hot" conductor.
to collect all these colours put them all in a bowl and mix them. Blue and orange are complimentary colors. They make brown.
The green and yellow is the earth wire The brown is the live wire The blue is the neutral wire A poem to help is: The brown live cow drinks from the blue neutral water and eats the green grass from earth
In electrical wiring, the live or "hot" wire is typically brown or red, the neutral wire is typically blue or black, and the ground wire is yellow or green. So, in this case, the brown wire is likely the hot wire, the blue wire is the neutral wire, and the yellow green wire is the ground wire.
In a Chinese cable with brown, blue, and white wires, the brown wire is typically the live wire, the blue wire is the neutral wire, and the white wire is the earth wire. It is important to double-check with a qualified electrician or follow local regulations to ensure safe wiring practices.
neither the blue or the brown is ground.... typically the ground is either green or green with a yellow stripe... brown is the hot wire and goes onto the brass screw in the connector...blue goes on the silver colored screw ...and green goes to ground
the old colours are black and red, they have been replaced by the European harmonisation of brown and blue. the black is now the blue the red is now the brown and the yellow and green is the CPC ( circuit protective conductor) or more commonly known as "earth" but that's a wrong identification of it.