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1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
I have a 1950s German slide projector (anyone remember slides?) which
I have been using with its German mains plug and an adaptor. I decided to replace the plug with a UK 13A plug. Having removed the German plug, I cannot remember which wire went were, and the colour coding is unfamiliar to me. There are three wires, coloured red, black and light grey. Can anyone tell me which is which? I guessed at red = live black = neutral but is the grey wire really the earth? Definitive advice will be very much appreciated! |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
Tony Polson wrote:
I have a 1950s German slide projector (anyone remember slides?) which I have been using with its German mains plug and an adaptor. I decided to replace the plug with a UK 13A plug. Having removed the German plug, I cannot remember which wire went were, and the colour coding is unfamiliar to me. There are three wires, coloured red, black and light grey. Can anyone tell me which is which? I guessed at red = live black = neutral but is the grey wire really the earth? Definitive advice will be very much appreciated! a multimeter will tell you which is which in no time. NT |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
In article ,
Tony Polson wrote: I have a 1950s German slide projector (anyone remember slides?) which I have been using with its German mains plug and an adaptor. I decided to replace the plug with a UK 13A plug. Having removed the German plug, I cannot remember which wire went were, and the colour coding is unfamiliar to me. There are three wires, coloured red, black and light grey. Can anyone tell me which is which? I guessed at red = live black = neutral but is the grey wire really the earth? Definitive advice will be very much appreciated! I'd really not guess about this. Black used to be line on continental stuff with light blue as neutral. The only safe way is to check with a DVM for a *dead short* between exposed metalwork and one of the wires which should then be earth. Or better still, open up the device and check physically. And replace the flex while you're at it with the correct modern stuff. The earth should be obvious as it will be connected to the metalwork. The line will go to the switch if a single pole type. -- *If all is not lost, where the hell is it? Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
The message
from Tony Polson contains these words: Definitive advice will be very much appreciated! Definitely take the projector apart and see where the wires go. Unless things are very different from my expectation, the live will go to the switch, the neutral to the other side of the bulb/fan/transformer/whatever, and the earth to the chassis. A clear photo of the gizzards macht alles klaar, yah? -- Skipweasel Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain. |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
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1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
"Tony Polson" wrote in message ... I have a 1950s German slide projector (anyone remember slides?) which I have been using with its German mains plug and an adaptor. I decided to replace the plug with a UK 13A plug. Having removed the German plug, I cannot remember which wire went were, and the colour coding is unfamiliar to me. There are three wires, coloured red, black and light grey. Can anyone tell me which is which? I guessed at red = live black = neutral DANGER DANGER DANGER Some german appliances of that era had RED =EARTH and caused death when imported into the UK and the earth was connected to live. This was one of many reasons why we now have common wireing colours.... |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
In article ,
James Salisbury wrote: DANGER DANGER DANGER Some german appliances of that era had RED =EARTH and caused death when imported into the UK and the earth was connected to live. This was one of many reasons why we now have common wireing colours.... Yes. FWIW, some German cars used red for the negative or ground - the exact opposite of UK practice. It's what annoys me when the objectors to unified colours throughout the EU go on about the 'instinctive' old colours. There's no such thing. -- *Isn't it a bit unnerving that doctors call what they do "practice?" Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
Tony Polson wrote:
red = live NO, NO, NO. RED was EARTH - definitely. Obvious danger lurks... Now you see why harmonisation of colours was such a good idea. black = neutral Black is live, I think. but is the grey wire really the earth? Grey for neutral Definitive advice will be very much appreciated! I'm not 100% sure about the last two, but RED IS DEFINITELY EARTH. -- Andy |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , Tony Polson wrote: I have a 1950s German slide projector (anyone remember slides?) which I have been using with its German mains plug and an adaptor. I decided to replace the plug with a UK 13A plug. Having removed the German plug, I cannot remember which wire went were, and the colour coding is unfamiliar to me. There are three wires, coloured red, black and light grey. Can anyone tell me which is which? I guessed at red = live black = neutral but is the grey wire really the earth? Definitive advice will be very much appreciated! I'd really not guess about this. Black used to be line on continental stuff with light blue as neutral. The only safe way is to check with a DVM for a *dead short* between exposed metalwork and one of the wires which should then be earth. Or better still, open up the device and check physically. And replace the flex while you're at it with the correct modern stuff. The earth should be obvious as it will be connected to the metalwork. The line will go to the switch if a single pole type. My advice also. |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ... In article , James Salisbury wrote: DANGER DANGER DANGER Some german appliances of that era had RED =EARTH and caused death when imported into the UK and the earth was connected to live. This was one of many reasons why we now have common wireing colours.... Yes. FWIW, some German cars used red for the negative or ground - the exact opposite of UK practice. It's what annoys me when the objectors to unified colours throughout the EU go on about the 'instinctive' old colours. There's no such thing. OTOH: 'Human Factor Engineers/industrial Physiologists do know about what is 'instinctive', or at least inculturated, for the 'majority' of people. 'Righty-Tighty ~ Lefty-Loosey'; Red -danger ; Clockwise-more, Anti-Clockwise~less; works for we acculturated folks in the UK. Having to bow-down to the dictates of an unelected bunch of Eurocrats dreaming up directives 'to work towards a more integrated Europe' is really 'what annoys me' (to quote your words). BTW; AIUI the EU bureaucracy will not employ people born _before_ the establishment of its predecessor(s) [Application forms bear a statement to that effect]. "It's what annoys me" that people with a earlier date-of-birth are presumed to be objectors "throughout the EU" -- Brian |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
"James Salisbury" wrote in message ... "Tony Polson" wrote in message ... I have a 1950s German slide projector (anyone remember slides?) which I have been using with its German mains plug and an adaptor. I decided to replace the plug with a UK 13A plug. Having removed the German plug, I cannot remember which wire went were, and the colour coding is unfamiliar to me. There are three wires, coloured red, black and light grey. Can anyone tell me which is which? I guessed at red = live black = neutral DANGER DANGER DANGER Some german appliances of that era had RED =EARTH and caused death when imported into the UK and the earth was connected to live. This was one of many reasons why we now have common wireing colours.... Yes - I recall in my teens I had probably the closest call when I had wired up a radio and whilst wondering why it wasn't working I touched the case and a metal socket on a wander lead. RCDs weren't heard of then! |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
Owain wrote:
Dave Plowman (News) wrote: Yes. FWIW, some German cars used red for the negative or ground - the exact opposite of UK practice. It's what annoys me when the objectors to unified colours throughout the EU go on about the 'instinctive' old colours. There's no such thing. I think those people mean that *our* colours were "instinctive". What those Jerries think is another thing entirely. Owain well are they? Ive seen plenty of red earth in my time, and brown. Don't even have to go further than Devon. Most earth is brown or black. Never seen any green earth. And as far as blue being a neutral colour. Not anywhere I've ever been. Its usually the colour of some political faction or other. |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
The message
from "Brian Sharrock" contains these words: Clockwise-more, Anti-Clockwise~less; The opposite of taps then. -- Skipweasel Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain. |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
The message
from "Brian Sharrock" contains these words: BTW; AIUI the EU bureaucracy will not employ people born _before_ the establishment of its predecessor(s) [Application forms bear a statement to that effect]. I'd doubt that'd stand up in court. -- Skipweasel Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain. |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
On 2006-10-05, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
Ive seen plenty of red earth in my time, and brown. Don't even have to go further than Devon. Most earth is brown or black. Never seen any green earth. But the *covering* is green. |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
"Brian Sharrock" wrote in message
... "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ... In article , James Salisbury wrote: DANGER DANGER DANGER Some german appliances of that era had RED =EARTH and caused death when imported into the UK and the earth was connected to live. This was one of many reasons why we now have common wireing colours.... Yes. FWIW, some German cars used red for the negative or ground - the exact opposite of UK practice. It's what annoys me when the objectors to unified colours throughout the EU go on about the 'instinctive' old colours. There's no such thing. OTOH: 'Human Factor Engineers/industrial Physiologists do know about what is 'instinctive', or at least inculturated, for the 'majority' of people. 'Righty-Tighty ~ Lefty-Loosey'; Red -danger ; Clockwise-more, Anti-Clockwise~less; works for we acculturated folks in the UK. Having to bow-down to the dictates of an unelected bunch of Eurocrats dreaming up directives 'to work towards a more integrated Europe' is really 'what annoys me' (to quote your words). BTW; AIUI the EU bureaucracy will not employ people born _before_ the establishment of its predecessor(s) [Application forms bear a statement to that effect]. "It's what annoys me" that people with a earlier date-of-birth are presumed to be objectors "throughout the EU" Where on earth do people get stuff like this from - I have in the past looked at EU job application forms, and no such statement was made. No such statement is made on current forms, and any such practice would contradict EU's own regulations on discrimination. Just because you read it in the Daily Mail doesn't make it true. Bureauocracies of all sorts do all sorts of dumb things. Harmonising colours in potentially lethal electrical wiring would seem to be one of their more sensible activities Andy |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
I have a 1993 German book for d-i-y that shows a table for wire colors of
old and new wiring. Black was and is always live. Neutral and earth weren't always a specific color-- they could have been light grey, beige, white or red. Our house was built in 1961 and has all of them. Today black is live, blue is neutral and green-yellow striped is earth. |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
Andy Wade wrote:
Tony Polson wrote: red = live NO, NO, NO. RED was EARTH - definitely. Obvious danger lurks... Now you see why harmonisation of colours was such a good idea. black = neutral Black is live, I think. but is the grey wire really the earth? Grey for neutral Definitive advice will be very much appreciated! I'm not 100% sure about the last two, but RED IS DEFINITELY EARTH. Thanks Andy. You're right, the red is definitely the earth. The red wire is clearly earthed to the metal chassis of the projector. There is an in-line switch in the cable so I thought I would open it up to see which of the other colour wires was switched, implying that it would be the live wire. The good news was that the red wire was connected to a chromed brass plate around the bakelite switch, further confirming that it is the earth, and that one conductor was switched and the other not. So far so good. Unfortunately the bad news is that the unswitched conductor is connected to the black wire at one end of the switch and the grey wire at the other. wry grin This presumably didn't matter in Germany as the plug could be inserted either way up. But it matters here, so I will borrow a multimeter and check which colour wire is the live feed to the lamp. Thanks to everyone who replied. |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
In article ,
Brian Sharrock wrote: It's what annoys me when the objectors to unified colours throughout the EU go on about the 'instinctive' old colours. There's no such thing. OTOH: 'Human Factor Engineers/industrial Physiologists do know about what is 'instinctive', or at least inculturated, for the 'majority' of people. 'Righty-Tighty ~ Lefty-Loosey'; Red -danger ; Clockwise-more, Anti-Clockwise~less; works for we acculturated folks in the UK. Having to bow-down to the dictates of an unelected bunch of Eurocrats dreaming up directives 'to work towards a more integrated Europe' is really 'what annoys me' (to quote your words). So you don't think unified wiring colours throughout the EU a good idea? But if you did how then do you get round the fact the that Germany apparently thought red the best colour for a safety wire while the UK chose green? Red may mean danger in most countries, but then the 'dangerous' wire to get wrong on a three wire appliance is the earth - not the other two. And don't let's forget red is the least visible colour to man in general - and even more so if you're partially colour blind. So it wasn't chosen with science but merely became the convention - why, I don't know. And I'd guess the same with threads and clocks. BTW; AIUI the EU bureaucracy will not employ people born _before_ the establishment of its predecessor(s) [Application forms bear a statement to that effect]. "It's what annoys me" that people with a earlier date-of-birth are presumed to be objectors "throughout the EU" Strange, given the main idea of the original 'common market' was to prevent wars between the likely members which had occurred rather too frequently in the past. -- *A fool and his money can throw one hell of a party. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
In article ,
Andy McKenzie wrote: Harmonising colours in potentially lethal electrical wiring would seem to be one of their more sensible activities As would a unified currency - if it weren't for big business making money out of different ones. -- *7up is good for you, signed snow white* Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
In article ,
Adam Funk wrote: Ive seen plenty of red earth in my time, and brown. Don't even have to go further than Devon. Most earth is brown or black. Never seen any green earth. But the *covering* is green. There you go. What's 'logical' to one isn't to another. Most earth varies around the brown end of the colour scale - certainly not green. Of course other English speaking countries call the safety connection 'ground'. Dunno what it's called in other languages. -- *I wonder how much deeper the ocean would be without sponges* Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
"Adam Funk" wrote in message ... On 2006-10-05, The Natural Philosopher wrote: Ive seen plenty of red earth in my time, and brown. Don't even have to go further than Devon. Most earth is brown or black. Never seen any green earth. But the *covering* is green. Well in that case the terminal should be marked "Grass" (to be instictive). Had not brown been snaffled for live it would have been just as instinctive for earth. Black is more instinctive for neutral and red is for danger innit? -- Bob Mannix (anti-spam is as easy as 1-2-3 - not) |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
"Guy King" wrote in message ... The message from "Brian Sharrock" contains these words: Clockwise-more, Anti-Clockwise~less; The opposite of taps then. Ah he did say "righty-tighty, lefty loosey" which (sort of) covers taps but just shows that the reminders are contradictory so it's all bockolls. -- Bob Mannix (anti-spam is as easy as 1-2-3 - not) |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
"MB" wrote in
: I have a 1993 German book for d-i-y that shows a table for wire colors of old and new wiring. Black was and is always live. Neutral and earth weren't always a specific color-- they could have been light grey, beige, white or red. Our house was built in 1961 and has all of them. Today black is live, blue is neutral and green-yellow striped is earth. How come the Germans haven't joined in the "unified" colour coding then? Are all European nations not so equal? mike |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
The message
from Tony Polson contains these words: Thanks Andy. You're right, the red is definitely the earth. The red wire is clearly earthed to the metal chassis of the projector. If you're not doing a museum quality restoration I'd be tempted to replace the mains lead completely with a modern standard one so some other poor sod doesn't come unstuck at a later date. -- Skipweasel Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain. |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
On 2006-10-05 14:39:56 +0100, Huge said:
On 2006-10-05, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , Andy McKenzie wrote: Harmonising colours in potentially lethal electrical wiring would seem to be one of their more sensible activities As would a unified currency - if it weren't for big business making money out of different ones. That is wrong in *so* many ways ... The main resisters were National Governments who didn't want to lose control of their economies. Most multinationals would be glad to see the back of national currencies. Mainly true apart from currency traders and the exchange places in the airports. Still, there's always John 2: 13-16....... |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
In article ,
Huge wrote: As would a unified currency - if it weren't for big business making money out of different ones. That is wrong in *so* many ways ... The main resisters were National Governments who didn't want to lose control of their economies. Most multinationals would be glad to see the back of national currencies. They might be - but in the UK big business means the financial institutions. -- *Avoid clichés like the plague. (They're old hat.) * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
In article ,
mike wrote: I have a 1993 German book for d-i-y that shows a table for wire colors of old and new wiring. Black was and is always live. Neutral and earth weren't always a specific color-- they could have been light grey, beige, white or red. Our house was built in 1961 and has all of them. Today black is live, blue is neutral and green-yellow striped is earth. How come the Germans haven't joined in the "unified" colour coding then? Are all European nations not so equal? For permanent wiring I'd guess they have recently - same as us. -- *Never test the depth of the water with both feet.* Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
On 2006-10-05, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
Ive seen plenty of red earth in my time, and brown. Don't even have to go further than Devon. Most earth is brown or black. Never seen any green earth. But the *covering* is green. There you go. What's 'logical' to one isn't to another. Most earth varies around the brown end of the colour scale - certainly not green. Copper-coloured wire with a green cover and reddish-brown dirt with a green cover --- the comparison makes sense to me. Of course 2/3 of the earth is covered with water, but I don't recommend this as an electrical technique. Of course other English speaking countries call the safety connection 'ground'. Dunno what it's called in other languages. Green, grass, ground. ;-) |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
mike wrote:
How come the Germans haven't joined in the "unified" colour coding then? The have so far as flexible cord colours are concerned. TTBOMK that's been fully harmonised since around 1970. Harmonisation of colours for fixed wiring has taken much longer and until earlier this year the UK was odd-man-out in allowing black for neutral. The situation now is that all EU member states use blue for neutral and green/yellow for protective earth. The colours for the three "live" phases varies, with some states using three browns, some three blacks and some brown for L1 and two blacks for L2 and L3. Rather oddly Germany uses black, brown, black for L1, L2, L3 respectively and thus black for the "live" in single-phase installations. One reason for the delay in the UK coming into line was that our national standards committee wanted to preserve the use of three distinct phase colours, so that the phase sequence was clear from the wiring colours alone. As we all know they succeeded and BS 7671 now requires brown, black, grey. There's a summary of phase colours by country in this document: http://www.iee.org/Publish/WireRegs/Impact_2004.pdf -- Andy |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
"Huge" wrote in message ... On 2006-10-05, Brian Sharrock wrote: BTW; AIUI the EU bureaucracy will not employ people born _before_ the establishment of its predecessor(s) [Application forms bear a statement to that effect]. Surely this is against the EU's own legislation? It might be, it might not be .... however it's policy. {I recall, dimly, seeing an advert for a Brussels job for which I (IMHO) was qualified ... the application form had a statement to the effect ; "Applicants born before dd/mm/yyyy will not be considered", I mentioned it en-passant to my MP who shrugged with a 'c'est le vie', some might say Gallic, gesture!} Votre ami -- Brian |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
"The Natural Philosopher" wrote in message ... Owain wrote: Dave Plowman (News) wrote: Yes. FWIW, some German cars used red for the negative or ground - the exact opposite of UK practice. It's what annoys me when the objectors to unified colours throughout the EU go on about the 'instinctive' old colours. There's no such thing. I think those people mean that *our* colours were "instinctive". What those Jerries think is another thing entirely. Owain well are they? Ive seen plenty of red earth in my time, and brown. Don't even have to go further than Devon. Most earth is brown or black. Never seen any green earth. And as far as blue being a neutral colour. Not anywhere I've ever been. Its usually the colour of some political faction or other. Consider; the UNO (or as the francophone say; ONU) utilises blue as the ground for its flag; signifying neutrality. Can one assume that the significance eluded you? -- Brian |
1950s German appliance wiring colour codes
Andy Wade wrote in
: mike wrote: How come the Germans haven't joined in the "unified" colour coding then? The have so far as flexible cord colours are concerned. TTBOMK that's been fully harmonised since around 1970. Harmonisation of colours for fixed wiring has taken much longer and until earlier this year the UK was odd-man-out in allowing black for neutral. snip info Ow - a bit more to it than I'd realised Thanx mike |
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