Black wire is HOT, white wire is NEUTRAL and bare or green wire is GROUND. The black wire goes to brass colored screw, the white wire goes to silver colored screw and the bare wire goes to green screw that is connected to the metal "frame" of the receptacle.
The castle can be plugged into any outdoor receptacle outlet from your home. There is no special wiring needed.
black
Check on the back of the receptacle. There should be a symbol Cu/Al. This means that the receptacle is approved for both copper and aluminium conductors to be used on it. If it does not have the Al symbol on the back it means that this devices is not approved for use with aluminium conductors.
Two reasons. In older wiring or possibly new depending on the region, it was common place to split a receptacle especially in kitchens so that the top half was on one circuit and one was on the other. You may have a tripped breaker. Otherwise, the receptacle was cut to be a split receptacle and never wired that way. If you feel safe doing so, pull the receptacle out of the wall with the POWER OFF. Look at the sides where the wires are screwed down and see if the metal tab that runs between the two screw per side is still intact. If its not and you want the receptacle on a single circuit, replace the receptacle, but this time, don't cut the tab.
Yes! you can install an switch a head of a GFCI receptacle. This installation is common in some applications to turn on an outside receptacle to control Christmas lights.
Short in the courtesy light receptacle, wiring, or the switch. Can also be a corroded receptacle.
The model plug should be able to plug into the receptacle easily into your wall without having to splice the wall.
The castle can be plugged into any outdoor receptacle outlet from your home. There is no special wiring needed.
There is a short in the wiring or a corroded brake light receptacle.
For North American wiring systems there is a test device known as a receptacle tester. It is a non-expensive device that just plugs into the wall receptacle. There are three lights that light telling you how the receptacle is configured. Newer devices also have a push button to test GCFI receptacles.In general, using a volt meter "hot" to ground equals 120 volts. Hot to neutral equals 120 volts. Neutral to ground no voltage. Large blade hole is the neutral and small blade hole is the "hot" connection, many times these will be reversed. If any of these examples are not met, then there is a wrong configuration of the wiring of the receptacle. Best answer is to buy a receptacle tester, even the electrical inspector carries one with them when inspecting new wiring jobs.
The 240 volt receptacle has to have an amperage rating. It is this rating that governs the wire size and breaker size to feed the circuit. The new two pole breaker will be inserted in the 100 amp distribution if space is available and connected to the new wiring that terminates at the new receptacle.
black
Check on the back of the receptacle. There should be a symbol Cu/Al. This means that the receptacle is approved for both copper and aluminium conductors to be used on it. If it does not have the Al symbol on the back it means that this devices is not approved for use with aluminium conductors.
Two reasons. In older wiring or possibly new depending on the region, it was common place to split a receptacle especially in kitchens so that the top half was on one circuit and one was on the other. You may have a tripped breaker. Otherwise, the receptacle was cut to be a split receptacle and never wired that way. If you feel safe doing so, pull the receptacle out of the wall with the POWER OFF. Look at the sides where the wires are screwed down and see if the metal tab that runs between the two screw per side is still intact. If its not and you want the receptacle on a single circuit, replace the receptacle, but this time, don't cut the tab.
A 220 volt receptacle is a receptacle which has 2 wires carrying 110 volts...it has two "hot" wires at 110 and a neutral or common leg which has no voltage. A 110 volt receptacle is a receptacle which has 1 wire which carries 110 volts and a common wire. The wiring in the USA is almost standardized now to where the two "hot" (carrying 110 volts) wires are colored black and red, and the common or neutral is white. To change a receptacle to 110 volts..you remove the red or black wire from the old receptacle and wire nut it off...leaving the other red or black to attach to the new receptacle (right side of receptacle usually, looking at it from the grounding hole on the receptacle ON THE BOTTOM). You then connect the white wire to the left side of the receptacle. This will provide only 110 volts now. If the wires are not black, red, and white..they may be black, black, and white. In most cases, the white wire is always the neutral or common wire. When in doubt, buy a voltmeter and check each wire to the metal box in the wall...the wires carrying the 110 volts will usually read 110 on the voltmeter (or 115, 118..etc). Good luck!
Yes! you can install an switch a head of a GFCI receptacle. This installation is common in some applications to turn on an outside receptacle to control Christmas lights.
Current rating must be equal, in both the points wiring.