White.
No !
To wire a 230 volt contactor with a 110 volt coil, you need to connect the 110 volt power supply to one terminal of the coil and the neutral wire to the other terminal of the coil. Ensure that the contactor is rated for use with a 110 volt control circuit. Additionally, verify the wiring diagram provided with the contactor for proper connection details.
A standard 110-volt wire typically consists of three components: a hot wire, a neutral wire, and a ground wire. The hot wire carries the electrical current to the device, the neutral wire completes the circuit by returning the current, and the ground wire provides a safety path for electricity in case of a fault. These components work together to ensure safe and effective electrical operation.
Generally, if the electrician did it right, the BLACK wire is HOT, and the WHITE wire is NEUTRAL. Meaning that the white wire is the center tap of the main transformer, and the black wire(s) are either leg of the 240 volt output. Since the hot to center tap only takes half of the 240, it ends up being 120 volts at your outlet.
on a standard 110-120 volt recptical the larger contact is the neutrial (white)side the smaller contact is the "hot" side
No !
To wire a 230 volt contactor with a 110 volt coil, you need to connect the 110 volt power supply to one terminal of the coil and the neutral wire to the other terminal of the coil. Ensure that the contactor is rated for use with a 110 volt control circuit. Additionally, verify the wiring diagram provided with the contactor for proper connection details.
A standard 110-volt wire typically consists of three components: a hot wire, a neutral wire, and a ground wire. The hot wire carries the electrical current to the device, the neutral wire completes the circuit by returning the current, and the ground wire provides a safety path for electricity in case of a fault. These components work together to ensure safe and effective electrical operation.
With a voltmeter Keep volt meter terminal on phase and neutral wire and it will show the exact volatage
No. They are two different voltage and amperage rated pieces of equipment. Also, a dryer does not use a common (neutral) wire. It uses two separate 110 volt legs, and a ground. The washer uses only one 110 volt leg, a neutral, and a ground.
Hot, neutral and ground.
Generally, if the electrician did it right, the BLACK wire is HOT, and the WHITE wire is NEUTRAL. Meaning that the white wire is the center tap of the main transformer, and the black wire(s) are either leg of the 240 volt output. Since the hot to center tap only takes half of the 240, it ends up being 120 volts at your outlet.
A breaker is based on wire size, as the breaker protects the wire and not the load. This is a voltage drop question. A #3 copper conductor will limit the voltage drop to 3% or less when supplying 60 amps for 110 feet on a 110 volt system.
on a standard 110-120 volt recptical the larger contact is the neutrial (white)side the smaller contact is the "hot" side
You don't. A ballast with a 347 volt input is a commercial ballast. The 347 volts comes from a 600 volt three phase four wire Y system. You can change the ballast out to a 120 volt and rewire the unit but in most cases it is cheaper to buy a completely new lighting fixture.
I hope not, it'll cook the 12 volt DC system.
France uses 220-240 volts for their electrical system.