Please tell me how it is done.
Take a conductor with G/Y (or sky-blue-pink, or whatever) insulation and connect it between a point which is at L potential and somewhere else.Please tell me how it is done.
Exactly. How is that identified as a line conductor?Take a conductor with G/Y insulation and connect it between a point which is at L potential and somewhere else.
I'm not sure why you are making an issue out of this, particularly given that we are agreed that the regulation (specifically about just G/Y 'identification') is unnecessary.Exactly. How is that identified as a line conductor?
And to really add insult to injury in the AV industry cables are often colour coded, often with PVC tape flags. The terminal box pictured earlier often has a set of brown wires with tape flags in the orter: brown, red, orange, yellow, green, blue, purple, grey, white, black [ie the international electrical/electronic colour code] and a matching set of blues in the same way as the numerical cable markers. Worse a bunch of wires in one colour, or a random selection, with 2 flags, as shown plus a brown or a blue.That's what I thought you meant, which is why I was a bit confused (and now am, again!).
If you so wished, it is surely true that you 'can' ('are able to'), literally/physically, use G/Y (or 'sky blue pink', 'polka dot' or anything else) to identify (for yourself) a live conductor - but you 'may not' do that if you want to conform with regulations/conventions etc.
This really does seem to be an unhelpful diversion, since we both know exactly what the situation is, regardless of 'words'.
Kind Regards, John
Indeed, that exactyly the sort of 'personal convention' (although, in this case, it would probably be more widely understood) I use with electronics or signalling/control situations, particularly when there are assoiciated multi-pin connectors etc..... a set of brown wires with tape flags in the orter: brown, red, orange, yellow, green, blue, purple, grey, white, black [ie the international electrical/electronic colour code]
Absolutely, And I've known inspections to fail when brown flagged blue or green and blue flagged brown or green etc. by house bashers trying to make their theories stick in a field they don't understand.In that context, to me brown identifies a conductor as being "#1" and blue identifies it as "#6" (not 'line' and 'neutral').
Kind Regards, John
I wonder what (if they also misunderstood the scope of an EICR) they would have to say about the 'identification' of my incoming neutral (red insulation with a brown sheath!) (this pic taken before the most recent meter-changer 'covered yp the evidence' with grey silicone ) ...Absolutely, And I've known inspections to fail when brown flagged blue or green and blue flagged brown or green etc. by house bashers trying to make their theories stick in a field they don't understand.
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