Ageless wrote:With the first set of lights; since the 'ground wire' wasn't rivetted to the base; it really won't matter. Incandescant lights don't care about polarity. Now when you get into LEDs; polarity matters.
S. Heisley wrote:I wired my Gustafson porch light with black as positive (hot) and white, as negative, which is how I wired all my lights and outlets and it all came out fine. I don't have any LED lights yet.
Additional info:
It is important to remain consistent with your wire colors so that you or someone else does not get confused later. Some of my wiring is sound wire, which contains one black and one red. Wherever I used that, I simply identified the red as negative by adding white tape to it. But, the black remained as the constant positive or 'hot' wire everywhere.
I also identified my wire lines with colored tape so that no matter where I look, I can tell what wire belongs to what electrical run. However, I only used white tape to identify the negative wires and not to identify any electrical run. ...I hope that makes sense to you.
Corwin C wrote:....... (some Volvo large trucks use a "positive ground" system on their headlights, the bright/dim switch is actually on the ground side of the circuit.) ......... Consistency is key.........
... since in DC wiring both the positive and negative wires are "hot" and neither of them is "grounded".
Now that I have said all of that, if you always use the wire that goes to the frame of the light as you negative wire and always use the wire that goes to the center of your bulb as the positive wire, it will never matter what color those wires are and you will never have a problem.
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