Difference between revisions of "A/C Electrical Wiring Information for North America"

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A house ground is easy to find, all you have to do is look outside at the power feed coming in, there should be a thick bare wire coming down the side of the structure that attaches to either a steel pipe or a thick rod, driven into the ground.  The neutral is tied to earth ground for lightning protection and to provide a path for any high voltage leakage from the power company's step down transformer. The ground is tied to the neutral to provide a return path to trip the breaker in the event of a fault.  The main breaker box should be the only point where neutral/ground need to be connected, never at the outlets or other places in the electrical system.
  
 
 
 
 

Revision as of 17:30, 10 July 2008

Wire Color Standard

Wirecolorstandard01.png

  • White - Neutral ..... (grounded conductor, neutral conductor, neutral point) conductor with continuity to the electrical system's center tap of the power company transformer.
  • Black - Hot 110v / 120v ..... (positive, power) not grounded, the active wire which is most likely to electrocute a person. This is the dangerous wire!
  • Bare - Ground ..... (grounding wire, earth ground) a conductor with continuity to earth, may be bare or identified insulated wire of green or having green stripes.
  • Red - Hot 110v / 120v

Wirecolorstandard02.png

Standard Wire

StandardWireXXXX.jpg

Earth Ground

A true earth ground, as defined by the National Electrical Code, physically consists of a conductive pipe or rod driven into the earth to a minimum depth of 8 feet.

Trueearthground.gif

A house ground is easy to find, all you have to do is look outside at the power feed coming in, there should be a thick bare wire coming down the side of the structure that attaches to either a steel pipe or a thick rod, driven into the ground. The neutral is tied to earth ground for lightning protection and to provide a path for any high voltage leakage from the power company's step down transformer. The ground is tied to the neutral to provide a return path to trip the breaker in the event of a fault. The main breaker box should be the only point where neutral/ground need to be connected, never at the outlets or other places in the electrical system.