The live pole carries the supply voltage and is usually colored brown or red. The neutral pole completes the circuit and is typically colored blue or black. Using a voltage detector or a multimeter set to AC voltage mode, you can identify the live wire by measuring the voltage between each wire and the ground, as the live wire will show a voltage level.
Lamps do not produce electrical energy, they consume it. The voltage at a lamp depends on the voltage of the local supply. That can be switched on or off to each individual map, or groups of lamps if required.
About 80% are caused by human activity, but sometimes not intentionally. For example, if a hydro pole falls and starts a fire, that is caused by human activity, because we built the hydro pole. If a campfire isn't put out properly, that is also considered human made, because we caused the fire by not putting out the campfire.
The flow of current has nothing to do with magnetism. It will flow in any direction you want, depending on the applied voltage.
The normal voltage of house electricity in Korea is 220 volts. This voltage is used for powering household appliances and electronic devices throughout the country.
240 volts from the secondary side of the transformer to your house
It is a type of transformer that you usually see hanging from a utility pole that feeds your house. It transforms the high transmission voltage down to the usable voltage that is used in the home.
The maximum voltage capacity of a 240V single pole breaker is 240 volts.
The transformer steps down the voltage from 600kilo volts which is what is at the power pole/lines to multiple strands of 120v or hot wires which is what your house runs off of.
voltage depend on current and resistance r.p.m depend on no of pole
Phase, if you are referring to line, as power line from pole.
Yes, but it has to be up to the specficiation of B.C. Hydro. You have to find out what class of pole that is needed. Is the pole for a secondary drop or a primary installation?
The live pole carries the supply voltage and is usually colored brown or red. The neutral pole completes the circuit and is typically colored blue or black. Using a voltage detector or a multimeter set to AC voltage mode, you can identify the live wire by measuring the voltage between each wire and the ground, as the live wire will show a voltage level.
Lamps do not produce electrical energy, they consume it. The voltage at a lamp depends on the voltage of the local supply. That can be switched on or off to each individual map, or groups of lamps if required.
In the United States the common house current is commonly referred to as either 115 volts or 120 volts. The voltage varies due to the distance from the transformer on the pole because electricity loses voltage the further it has to travel.
transformer YES but transmission is 475kv and distribution is 16kv and finally one phase out of a transformer on a pole or on the ground. An electric switch yard will have transformers to reduce to distribution voltage.
Probably your radiator fluid leaking out.