The presence of the red wire in a light switch situation usually involves a 3 way switch. The light itself would only have the black and white running to it but the switches have the extra wire between them for the traveler.
See the Related Link shown below for a diagram, or just Google "3 way switch diagram".
You can't. You first figure out what the red and black do and why there is no white. Then you call an electrician to explain grounding/earthing wires and how to get a proper ground to the green wire before someone is electrocuted.
You can't operate 220 V equipment from 110 V power, and therefore cannot do what you are asking.
If on the other hand you want to run 110 V equipment from 220 V power, don't use the red wire. However to meet the electrical I think you are required to add a circuit breaker or fuse on the new 110 V branch circuit.
It really depends on what you are connecting to.
if you mean the red wire used for a ceiling fan you connect the red wire to the blue wire
white wire to black and yellow to blue
you take the blue wire and connect it with the red then connect it to the yellow then you cut the green wire and there you go!
Connect the black wire to the incoming hot wire and the red wire to the out going load.
Red is negavite some black
Normally red or black is the hot wire and green is the ground. However someone may have used the green wire as the neutral wire which is normally white. Just connect the black wire from the light to the red wire and the white wire from the light to the green wire and see if it works. If not you have to pull the wires out of the ceiling box and see how they wired it.
You connect it with the same hot wire as the black wire in the fan. It is intended to be tied to a different switch. One for the fan, and one for the light kit.
I connect the red wire to the blue wire to deactivate a bomb.
Don't connect the red wire or you will die.
you take the blue wire and connect it with the red then connect it to the yellow then you cut the green wire and there you go!
In the heater you will have two wires. You should then have 2 supply wires from the panel, and 2 wires from the thermostat. The neutral (white) supply wire should go to one of the wires on the heater. The hot (black) supply wire should connect to one wire from the thermostat. The other wire from the thermostat will connect to the other wire from the heater.
connect the blue wire to the red wire before you press "START"
Connect the black wire to the incoming hot wire and the red wire to the out going load.
Red is negavite some black
The 1964 VW Beetle ignition switch only has three wires. Connect the red wire to the positive post. Connect the black wire to the negative posts. Connect the white wire to the auxiliary post.
Normally red or black is the hot wire and green is the ground. However someone may have used the green wire as the neutral wire which is normally white. Just connect the black wire from the light to the red wire and the white wire from the light to the green wire and see if it works. If not you have to pull the wires out of the ceiling box and see how they wired it.
it means you should connect the red wire together and the other red wire together by tieing them together. :) =)
To connect an RJ11 telephone jack, first, strip the telephone line providing the dial tone. Then, strip those wires to show the copper. Then, loosen the screws on the jack. Connect the red wire to the red screw, and tighten the screw. Connect the green wire to the green screw, and tighten the screw. Connect the black wire to the black screw, and tighten the screw. Connect the yellow wire to the yellow screw, and tighten the screw. If the wiring does not match the colors of the jack, then follow these steps: First, connect the blue wire to the red screw, and tighten the screw. Then, connect the blue/white wire to the green screw, and tighten the screw. Then, connect the orange/white wire to the black screw, and tighten the screw. Then, connect the orange wire to the yellow screw, and tighten the screw. Then, screw the jack onto the wall with the appropriate screws. Connect a working telephone to the jack, and check for a dial tone. If you hear a dial tone, then you have successfully connected all of the wires to the jack. If you do not hear a dial tone, check to make sure that all of the wires are securely on the screws, and that none of the copper has come off of the wire.
You connect it with the same hot wire as the black wire in the fan. It is intended to be tied to a different switch. One for the fan, and one for the light kit.