MtnDon wrote:I believe I am correct in stating that new "store bought" RV's all have the green / ground wire in the AC circuits connected to the metal framing.
H.A. wrote:I wish the engineering world would come up with more generally understood terms to describe these conductors.
H.A. wrote:The vernacular phrase of 'Hot, Neutral & Ground" does a better job but still too many folks somehow believe "ground" & "neutral" to be the same thing.
MtnDon wrote:IF you take your lead from the NEC, then black is always hot. AC wiring. The NEC also states that the second hot wire (if any) will be red and that the neutral will be white or grey.
In residential solar power the NEC approved color codes are black for a DC positive with red accepted by most inspectors. Negative DC though can never be black under NEC. Black is reserved for a hot wire. White is seen as neutral if AC, so in DC white (or grey) becomes the color for negative wires.
capnTelescope wrote:Even more folks won't know a thing about AC wiring and wonder why there is no red wire. I think we should be careful, when we answer someone's question, to make it clear in the beginning not just hot/neutral/ground, but black/white/copper. Especially when the question is very elementary.
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