bure961
Senior Member
- Location
- Farmingham, MA
Some people use color codes. So if its red and black wiring it a very good chance its dc.
I didn't know DC couldn't be transformed. This brings up another dumb question, do volt tracers work on dc power?
Some people use color codes. So if its red and black wiring it a very good chance its dc.
I never said it could be. It is very common to transform AC to the needed voltage then rectify it to DC though.I didn't know DC couldn't be transformed.
Some people use color codes. So if its red and black wiring it a very good chance its dc.
Maybe not transformed but it can be inverted to produce AC.I didn't know DC couldn't be transformed.
Some people use color codes. So if its red and black wiring it a very good chance its dc.
This reminds me of the high school physics assignment to describe a way to measure the height of a tall building using a barometer.If you have a no-contact tester and it indicates, it's AC.
If you have an Ideal solenoid tester, it will tell you if it's AC or DC by which of the LED's light up.
If the wires are on a transformer, it's AC.
If the wires are on a battery, it's DC.
Motors and incandescent lights can be either.
And, as others have said, using a volt meter will work, too.
If it is DC, grounded and under the NEC one conductor would have to be white.
White could be positive or negative, you would have to test to tell.
There would be no white ie. neutral wire in a DC system right? Just positive and negative.
As would I. See post #18.I would still use my DVM.
I didn't know DC couldn't be transformed. This brings up another dumb question, do volt tracers work on dc power?
There would be no white ie. neutral wire in a DC system right? Just positive and negative.
DC can not be transformed from one voltage to another with a traditional transformer.
DC can be transformed from one voltage to another by rotating machinery, basicly a DC motor to suit the supply voltage, that drives a dynamo to produce the desired voltage. Adds considerable cost, complication and losses and therefore avoided if possible.
These days, DC can be transformed from one voltage to another by means of DC to DC converters that use electronics, these are a relatively new invention, certainly not available in the Edison era.
And, no, non contact voltage tracers do not work on DC.
It can also be increased.DC can also be dropped from one voltage to another by the use of solid state voltage regulators.
It can also be increased.
Step up or step down choppers. We've done them up tp 3000V and 6000kW.
Quite so.That's some big choppers!!