In a standard three-pin plug, the hot wire (live wire) is typically connected to the right pin when looking at the plug with the pins facing away from you. The left pin is usually the neutral wire, while the top pin is the earth (ground) wire. However, it's important to check local wiring standards, as they can vary by country.
A polarized plug can only fit together in one direction. This is to prevent reverse polarity in the device you are plugging in.
Standard 115 extension cords have three wires but sometimes the ground is the only wire that is color coded. If you cut off the plug, you can lose a sense of which wire is NEUTRAL (white) and which is HOT (black). Its easy if you THINK. Look at the plug as and a receptacle as if you were going to push it in. The ground wire (green) is on the bottom. The ribbed side is on the left of the plug. If you look at a receptacle, you will see that side is NEUTRAL. The smooth wire side is on the right of the plug and would connect to the BLACK side of the receptacle. Got it? Most 3-wire cords use color coding. Most 2-wire cords use the "ribbed" method. The RIBBED side is supposed to be the "identified wire" which is the neutral. Be careful with thinking "right" or "left" because some 3-wire receptacles are installed horizontally or with the ground up. Further, don't assume the ribbed side is neutral on an existing installation unless you test and confirm it.
Live neutral and earth. My name is Travis C. Williams, and I'm a contractor, the left slot is called Neutral, the right slot is called Hot, and the bottom hole is called Ground. When you're hooking up a new 120volt 15 amp receptacle to 12-2 w/G wire, you'll hook the white wire (Neutral) to the silver colored screw on the left, and you'll hook the black wire (Hot) to the brass colored screw on the right, and you'll hook the bare wire (Ground) to the green screw on the bottom left hand corner. Hope my answer helped you.
In North America the connections for a 15 amp cap (plug) goes as follows. Looking at the plug from the blade side directly on you should see a larger blade (silver) on the right, smaller (brass) blade on the left and a U shaped ground blade on the bottom. The white wire connects under the right (silver) coloured screw, the black wire connects under the left (brass) coloured screw and the green wire under the green ground screw.
No, the wide prong is neutral it is the white wire. The narrow prong is hot it is the black wire. The round prong (in a 3 wire plug) is safety ground it is the green wire.
A polarized plug can only fit together in one direction. This is to prevent reverse polarity in the device you are plugging in.
Standard 115 extension cords have three wires but sometimes the ground is the only wire that is color coded. If you cut off the plug, you can lose a sense of which wire is NEUTRAL (white) and which is HOT (black). Its easy if you THINK. Look at the plug as and a receptacle as if you were going to push it in. The ground wire (green) is on the bottom. The ribbed side is on the left of the plug. If you look at a receptacle, you will see that side is NEUTRAL. The smooth wire side is on the right of the plug and would connect to the BLACK side of the receptacle. Got it? Most 3-wire cords use color coding. Most 2-wire cords use the "ribbed" method. The RIBBED side is supposed to be the "identified wire" which is the neutral. Be careful with thinking "right" or "left" because some 3-wire receptacles are installed horizontally or with the ground up. Further, don't assume the ribbed side is neutral on an existing installation unless you test and confirm it.
What kind of plug? 120 Volt Alternating Currant non-grounded is black (hot) to narrow blade, white (neutral) to wide blade. Grounded has third prong, which is 'u' shaped, above and centered flat blades, which connects to the green (ground) wire. Be aware of currant loads, and use the proper gauge wire for the load. green&white wire to the top of plug, blue to the left, red to the right
An L5-30P is a two pole three wire grounding 30 amp, 125 volt plug . The neutral wire is connected to the W terminal, the ground wire to the G terminal and the hot wire to the only terminal that is left. The small blade/slot is neutral (white), the larger blade/slot is hot (black) and the notched blade/slot is ground (green).
Live neutral and earth. My name is Travis C. Williams, and I'm a contractor, the left slot is called Neutral, the right slot is called Hot, and the bottom hole is called Ground. When you're hooking up a new 120volt 15 amp receptacle to 12-2 w/G wire, you'll hook the white wire (Neutral) to the silver colored screw on the left, and you'll hook the black wire (Hot) to the brass colored screw on the right, and you'll hook the bare wire (Ground) to the green screw on the bottom left hand corner. Hope my answer helped you.
In North America the connections for a 15 amp cap (plug) goes as follows. Looking at the plug from the blade side directly on you should see a larger blade (silver) on the right, smaller (brass) blade on the left and a U shaped ground blade on the bottom. The white wire connects under the right (silver) coloured screw, the black wire connects under the left (brass) coloured screw and the green wire under the green ground screw.
To wire a 3-prong plug with 4 wires correctly, you will need to connect the green wire to the ground terminal, the white wire to the neutral terminal, the black wire to the hot terminal, and the red wire to the second hot terminal. Make sure to follow the specific instructions provided with the plug and consult a professional if needed.
it depends on the car ..it either on the right or the left side of your engine trace your hot wire from the battery
the hot wire carries the electrical voltage
To hook up a 3 prong dryer cord correctly, first make sure the dryer is unplugged. Then, connect the neutral wire to the center terminal, the hot wire to the left terminal, and the ground wire to the right terminal. Tighten the screws securely and plug in the dryer to test it.
No, the wide prong is neutral it is the white wire. The narrow prong is hot it is the black wire. The round prong (in a 3 wire plug) is safety ground it is the green wire.
If you are refering to a wall receptacle, the one on the right is the hot side. The left side is the neutral and it's slot is larger that the hot one. The U shaped on the bottom is for the ground pin of the plug.