No, the neutral (white wire) should be connected to the center tap of the supply transformer.
The electrical service that comes to your home should have 3 wires. Across the 2 black wires should be 240 VAC. That comes from a transformer that steps down from the transmission voltage that is on the high voltage lines.
The "center tap" of the output of that transformer gives you 2 legs of the supply, each at 120 VAC.
In years past, the center tap has often been connected to ground, but that is no longer the case.
The center tap is the neutral connection, and the ground is the part that keeps you from being electrocuted.
You should never switch the neutral wire. The neutral of the appliance should be connected directly to the neutral wire leading to the service panel neutral bar.
No, the bare grounded neutral conductor of a service should not be buried directly in the ground. It should be installed above ground or within a suitable raceway or conduit to provide proper protection against damage or corrosion.
No, the ground and neutral wires should not share the same bus bar in an electrical panel. The ground wire is for safety and should be connected to the ground bus bar, while the neutral wire is for returning current and should be connected to the neutral bus bar. Mixing them can cause dangerous conditions like electrical shock or fires.
No, an ammeter should not be connected in the neutral wire of a circuit. It should be connected in series with the load on the live wire to measure current flowing through the circuit accurately. Disconnect the power source before connecting an ammeter and always follow safety guidelines when working with electrical circuits.
Yes, it is important to keep the neutral and ground wires separated downstream of the electrical service box. Mixing these two wires can create potential safety hazards, such as electrical shocks or fires. It is crucial to follow proper wiring practices and guidelines to ensure a safe electrical installation.
It is the conductor that is used in service distribution panels that bonds the distribution panel's neutral bus bar to the ground electrode (rod). This brings all of the distribution panel neutrals that are connected to the same supply system to the same potential, that being zero. Should a supply service neutral open this ground wire will maintain the systems integrity until repairs can be made.
You should never switch the neutral wire. The neutral of the appliance should be connected directly to the neutral wire leading to the service panel neutral bar.
You should not have to crimp the copper grounding electrical wire to the aluminium service neutral. There is only one place where these two wires should meet. In the service distribution panel there is a neutral block where the two wires are connected. There are individual terminal points in the block. Tighten the ground rod wire under one of these points and place the incoming service neutral under another point in the same block. In this same block there will be a machine screw that bonds the neutral block to the distribution panel's enclosure.
It is the conductor that is used in service distribution panels that bonds the distribution panel's neutral bus bar to the ground electrode (rod). This brings all of the distribution panel neutrals that are connected to the same supply system to the same potential, that being zero. Should a supply service neutral open this ground wire will maintain the systems integrity until repairs can be made.
Answer for USA, Canada and countries running a 60 Hertz supply service.Nothing but the neutral bus should be bonded to the ground electrode.
You can not have a "neutral earth" the "neutral" and the "earth" are separate wires/connections and should not be cross connected or muddled up.
No, the sub panel neutral and ground wires should not be connected to the same bus bar. They should be connected to separate bus bars to ensure proper grounding and safety in the electrical system.
No, the bare grounded neutral conductor of a service should not be buried directly in the ground. It should be installed above ground or within a suitable raceway or conduit to provide proper protection against damage or corrosion.
if you look on the transmission, you should see two wires connected to the neutral switch.
In the US, house wire has the BLACK wire connected to the HOT phase of the service input. The WHITE wire is connected to the NEUTRAL of the service input. Normally, both BLACK and WHITE wires are each connected to the 2 LOAD terminals. It is also normal that the WHITE service wire is connected to the wider spade outlet receptacle. The BLACK wire would then be connected to the shorter or narrower outlet spade receptacle. In wired screw lamp circuits, it is normal to wire the BLACK service wire to the center pad of the lamp socket and the WHITE wire to the screw shell of the socket. In switch circuits, it is normal to wire the BLACK service wire to the switch. The HOT service circuit is then opened or closed by the switch. Measuring voltage on your neutral means there is a break in neutral. If the neutral is broken you will measure voltage across the break or from the break to ground. Under this scenario you will measure the same voltage as you do on your hot wire and your load should not be working. Measuring voltage on your neutral less than on your hot wire may mean you have a problem where your neutral is supposed to be bonded to ground in your main service panel. In this scenario your load may be working but you need to check the bonding connection.
No, the ground and neutral wires should not share the same bus bar in an electrical panel. The ground wire is for safety and should be connected to the ground bus bar, while the neutral wire is for returning current and should be connected to the neutral bus bar. Mixing them can cause dangerous conditions like electrical shock or fires.
If the hot is connected to the supply and it is turned on and the switch is turned on and the neutral not connected this could be quite true. Connect the neutral to the supply neutral and shut the switch off. Now the only reading that you should get is the hot supply.