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Eric9822 Eric9822 is offline
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Default European House Wire Colors

On Feb 14, 8:05*pm, Joe wrote:
On Feb 14, 8:10*pm, Nate Nagel wrote:





RBM wrote:
"Red Green" wrote in message
...


A diagram for a Bosch sander I have shows a brown (braun) and a blue (blau)
wire from the cord. It shows which goes where to the switch. The existing
cord is a US cord with, of course, a black and a white. I had to get a new
switch and did not note which went where on the old switch.


Checking the new swith input and output terminals I found which is neutral
(US the white wire) because this is always on regardless of switch
position. This has to be for the white wire since the golden rule is white
wire never gets interupted by a device.


So, from the diagram it seems that European (German anyway) that brown is
hot and blue is neutral. Anyone really confirm this?


Correct: Blue is neutral, Brown is hot


That makes no damn sense, as brown is ground on German cars.


Of course, we have plenty of white wires used as hot on American cars too...


nate


--
replace "roosters" with "cox" to reply.http://members.cox.net/njnagel


Agree with Nate, the German auto standard is brown for ground wires.
Don't know if the standard applies to the German commercial sector,
but wouldn't be surprised if it did.

Joe- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


You are talking two different things here, AC vs. DC. Black is ground
on US cars (DC), black is line voltage in the US (DC), there is no
correlation between the two. The OP and RBM are correct. Blue is the
neutral and brown is the line voltage.