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My computer kept switching all the time when ever I was playing a game. So I had alook in my computer and a wire I bought to extend the CPU wire. The extended wire had burnt so bad that the wire was showing out of the insulting. Will this effect my computer in any way because it was working fine and I shut it down before I took the wire out does it matter that my psu only has a 4 pin for CPU and my motherboard has a 8pin?
It is possible that the wire extension is of poor quality or the wrong gauge. Unless the wire touched something inside the case you are probably ok. It is usually not a big deal if you only have 4 pin PSU and an 8 pin motherboard unless you are running a huge amount of watts through your board. Of course if you are running a couple of GPU's then you might consider getting a better PSU with an 8 pin.
hi i was wondering if its possible to electrify chicken wire? i have chickens in some fields and they keep wondering and chicken wire is alot cheaper than buying proper electric fencing??
It would be difficult to do. First you would have to insulate the fence wire from the ground. That means it could not be touching the posts. Next you would need a fence charger, a power supply if it is not battery operated, and a ground rod. It is not as simple as hooking a wire to the fence.
four lead black wire coming from fan coil motor for a recessed wall unit; ribbed on one side, smooth on the other side, and two flat sided wires in between. Which wire would be common and which wire would be hi, med, and lo?
Need more info. What voltage ? Different colors on wires? White usual indicates common or the neutral. Black is your hot for 120 usuAlly. Hi med And low Are power settings on the fan I don't believe ud have to wire them seperatly. Repost this with more specific info and I'll answer it. I'm an electrician And have a master electrician with me so if u give more info I can help.
is this a wire that like is the same as buying any other one?
Wire is wire pretty much. Some manufactures will market thier wire as high strand or 99 percent oxygen free but you won't notice a difference. Its more for bragging rights.
i am installing a headunit, i connected all the wires the match, but i have some left over that i am confused about. from the wires that plug into the radio there is the antenna wire, the remote wire, and the ground with a washer to screw it down, and from the other is set of wires is a solid orange wire, which i have no idea where it goes to. so i connected the remote to the orange wire and didn't hook up the antenna to anything, and bolted down the ground wire. I'm wondering why i have 2 ground wires, and what the orange wire is and what do i connect to it?
if its basically static, your audio gadget are effective, verify that not one of the wires are touching, whether its basically one + touching a - the entire gadget will sound undesirable (different than for the sub which gets its sign from a different source. verify at the back of the cd participant and in case you're able to desire to get rid of each and each speaker a million by using a million.
What's the factors affecting resistance of a wire? and why? thank you!
The 2nd and 3rd discussions were good but didn't discuss magnetism. The 1st guy: an open circuit has infinite resistance. Even a straight piece of wire has some self-inductance (or self-magnetism). One affect of inductance is that it opposes changes in current. So when you first apply a dc voltage across a wire and a dc current starts to flow, the self-inductance will resist the increase in current. It will appear to be because of higher resistance than expected. But the current will increase over a short time, and once it gets to a steady-state, the apparent resistance from the self-inductance is zero. This, self-inductance in a straight piece of wire, is a minor affect compared to components that presumably are in the circuit. After the current reaches steady state, the self-inductance will try to oppose a decrease in current. If the voltage and therefore the current are ac - alternating, this gets more complicated. The current is always trying to change. At the level of study I think you are, you should save this for later.
Live wire- bring current to appliancesNeutral wire- returns the current from the applianceMy question is, if we are using AC current, then in the next half cycle, the live wire will return the current from the appliance and the neutral wire will bring current to appliances. Am I right? If I’m right, then both wires have the same function why give them different names? Really appreciate your help.
You are right technically. However, with AC, the convention is that the current always flows from the hot to the neutral. Yes, we know it reverses every half cycle, but for the convention, just consider it always flowing from the hot to neutral. The difference between the two wires is that the neutral is at ground potential, or within a few volts of it, whereas the hot is 120 or 240 volts away from ground. Another example, a 240 volts split phase power to an electric oven. In this case, there are two hot wires, each at a potential of 120 volts from ground or neutral, but opposite in phase, so the current flows from one hot to the other hot. Again, it reverses twice per cycle.
US electrical tech question from a non electrically minded fag. I have a dimmer controlling a light and a single light switch controlling a fan. There is one blue wire going to the dimmer and one blue wire going to the switch. There is one black wire going to a 2nd terminal on the switch, which is also connected to a 2nd wire leading to the 2nd terminal on the dimmer. Now tell me how to wire an outlet into this ******* mess.Inb4 op is a fag, inb4 op should post this somewhere else, inb4 turn the power on and touch the wires, inb4 op can't inb4
If you dont want this to be the last thing you, or someone else who touches a live wire ever does, get an electrician in. They are so worth it. Look up wiring diagrams on line if you are going to go ahead with it anyhow.