If you're asking this question you shouldn't be installing an electrical service of any kind.
This type of question usually means you aren't ready to do this work yet. Study some electrical textbooks and the National Electrical Code and work the answer out for yourself, or call a professional electrician.
If someone were to give you an answer here, you might attempt to do something you shouldn't be doing, and that may cost someone a shock, a home fire, or their life.
IF YOU ARE NOT ALREADY SURE YOU CAN DO AN ELECTRICAL WIRING JOB
SAFELY AND COMPETENTLY
REFER THIS WORK TO QUALIFIED PROFESSIONALS.
If you do this work yourself, always turn off the power
at the breaker box/fuse panel BEFORE you attempt to do any work
AND
always use an electricians test meter having metal-tipped probes
(not a simple proximity voltage indicator)
to insure the circuit is, in fact, de-energized.
You have a 3 way switch. Your black wire is the hot wire. Your green wire is the ground wire. Your red and white wires go to the light and other switch. You should have gotten a wiring diagram with your switch.
Red, white, and black are standard for a three-way switch (you have two switches that control the same fixture). You should also have a ground wire (copper, unsheathed). The black and red are negative, while the white is positive. It works pretty simply. When the switch is up, the black and white are linked, creating a circuit. When it is down, the red and white are linked. If both switches agree (both are red/white or both are black/white), then the circuit is completed and power flows.
It depends on what the wires are connected to and where the power supply is located. If the switch is lighted power has to get to the switch for the light. With a lighted switch you have a hot supply side, a neutral and then the wire going to the bell. So if Black 1 and Red 1 are supply voltage you would connect Red 1 to the hot side of switch, Black 1 would go to common as would Black 2. Red 2 would go to Bell side of the switch.
One wire goes to the sending unit in the tank. It should hook to a terminal beside where the fuel line connects. The other one grounds out the body of the sending unit or the whole plate where the fuel line goes into the tank. 3-4 inch round plate. The ground wire will either go into the wire harness with the sending unit one or ground directly to the frame. The ground wire on all gas tanks very often rusts off.
The red wire typically goes to L2, while the black wire goes to L1. The earth wire should be connected to the earth terminal or grounding screw. Make sure to consult the wiring diagram or a professional electrician to ensure the correct and safe connection.
The red wire typically goes to the black wire.
The red wire is Positive, (+) and the Black wire is Negative. (-)
The black wire goes to the brass colored screw and the white wire goes to the silver screw.
You have a 3 way switch. Your black wire is the hot wire. Your green wire is the ground wire. Your red and white wires go to the light and other switch. You should have gotten a wiring diagram with your switch.
There are probably dozens of black and white wires under the hood. It is a normal color for a ground wire. With out knowing where it or the green wire go, I can not answer.There are probably dozens of black and white wires under the hood. It is a normal color for a ground wire. With out knowing where it or the green wire go, I can not answer.
red to pos black to neg
The thick black wire is the negative which should be connected to the frame of the ATV (negative ground). The red wire comes from the battery positive terminal and should go to the start solenoid From the other side of start solenoid a red wire of the same size as the black one should go to the starter.
no sparking fanThe white wire from the fan to the white wire from the ceiling get wire nutted together.The black and blue wire from the fan go to the black wire from the ceiling and all 3 get wire nutted together. Lastly the green wire from the fan and the bare copper wire from the ceiling get wire nutted together. 90% of fans are wired this way.
Take the ignition wire apart from there take a jumper wire and go from the red to the black
The red wire typically connects to the black wire.
Yes, the red wire is a positive wire (+) and the black wire is a negative wire (-) :D
I don't believe it goes anywhere. I have the same unplugged wire.