No, the neutral wire is not hot in an electrical circuit. It carries the return current back to the power source and is typically at a voltage close to ground.
In an electrical circuit, the white wire is typically used as the neutral wire, not the hot wire.
In an electrical circuit, the black wire is typically the hot wire.
In an electrical circuit, the white wire is typically considered to be the neutral wire.
In an electrical circuit, the white wire is typically designated as the neutral wire.
No, the white wire is typically neutral in an electrical circuit and is not considered hot.
In an electrical circuit, the black wire is typically considered to be the hot wire.
In an electrical circuit, the white wire is typically used as the neutral wire.
In an electrical circuit, the black wire is typically designated as the hot wire.
In an electrical circuit, the red wire is typically considered the hot wire, while the black wire is usually the neutral wire.
The hot wire carries electrical current to the device, while the neutral wire completes the circuit by returning the current to the power source.
Yes, the neutral wire in an electrical circuit does carry voltage, but it is typically close to 0 volts compared to the hot wire which carries the higher voltage.
An electrical circuit forms a loop. The "live" or hot wire supplies the voltage, which is returned on the neutral. If the hot wire and neutral wire were connected together without a load between them, the circuit would be short out and trip the circuit's protection device.