Positive - The wire for the positive current is red. Negative - The wire for the negative current is black. Ground - The ground wire (if present) will be white or grey.
If you wired up a socket wrong, and plugged in a 2-wire lamp (no earth connected), it just would not work. If you plugged in something that was earthed somewhere else (like a TV connected to an earthed antenna cable), you might blow a fuse or damage the TV, since the live would short to earth.
A little hard to read, but the left side says "hot wire" and the right side says "white wire". We'll put the black wires on the hot side and the white wires on the left side. First connect the ground wire to the green screw at the bottom of the outlet.
The neutral and hot wires are connected to the two vertical prongs at the top of the receptacle, with neutral on the left silver screw and hot on the right gold screw, and the ground wire is connected to the green screw at the bottom.
As you can see, the neutral and hot wires are connected to the two vertical prongs at the top of the receptacle (neutral on the left, hot on the right) and the ground wire is connected to the round prong at the bottom of the receptacle.
The wide prong on the plug links the threaded base of light bulbs to the neutral terminal (the wider slot) in the receptacle. The hot side of the outlet (the side that can deliver a shock) is wired to the threaded socket if the wires are reversed.
How to Convert 120V to 12V
- Add up the amperage needs of all devices that will be powered by your 12 volt power supply.
- Shop for a power supply capable of supplying 12 volts as well as the total amperage all of your devices will need.
- Plug in your power supply into a standard wall outlet and turn on the power switch if it is equipped with one.
What this means is that the amount of time this battery could continuously supply a current of 1 amp would be 70 to 80 hours before going completely dead. An automotive fan can draw anywhere from 8 to 15 amps .
How to Convert From 12 Volt to 110
- Determine the power consumption (wattage) of the device you wish to operate.
- Procure a voltage inverter which is rated to supply the number of watts you will need.
- Verify that your DC power source is sufficient to power the inverter and attached devices.
- Connect the voltage inverter to your DC source.
It depends on the load (How much the fan draws from the lighter thing), and the capacity (amount of charge) of your Battery, and the amount of charge your Battery currently has. Then you could plug the Fan into it directly. Your Fan would run Constantly without draining your car's Battery at all .
The only important difference is that you can't, or at least shouldn't, plug a cigarette lighter into an accessory socket. In a worst-case scenario, the lighter will heat up, but the socket won't be able to withstand the extreme heat of the lighter.
The 12V socket, also known variously as a car cigarette lighter or 12V auxiliary power outlet, is the primary method by which power is delivered to portable electronics in cars, trucks, recreational vehicles, boats, and in a handful of other contexts.
Do you need an inverter: Yes, unless you want to take forever. Hairdryers require a lot of juice to run, so units that are designed to plug into cigarette lighters are typically pretty anemic compared to the ones you're probably used to.
There are 3 types of 12v fuses I recommend. They are Spade Fuses, ANL fuses, and Re-settable Breakers. Spade fuses are the fuses that you'll commonly find in your car's fuse panel and are typically for items run out of your distribution block and less than 30 amps (in our case.
The process is fairly simple. You press the push-button-like mechanism in far enough for the clip to engage stretching the spring in the process. The power from the socket runs through the coil through the now connected coil, rapidly heating it up. As the insides heat up, the bi-metallic clip bends away, allow
Most likely the neutral wire is white and the hot wire is red or black, but test to make sure. Identify the neutral wire in the fixture by looking at the wires. In most modern fixtures the neutral wire will be white and the hot wire is red or black. In some types of fixtures, both wires will be the same color.
The protective ground is green or green with yellow stripe. The neutral is white, the hot (live or active) single phase wires are black , and red in the case of a second active.
Light fixtures manufactured in the United States must follow the color-coding rules established by the NEC. However, the NEC has only one requirement, and that is that the neutral wire must be white or gray. Most North American manufacturers make the hot wire black and the ground wire green, but they don't have to.