Do you know that, as of April next year, the mains wiring colours will change for the UK? In fact, any electrical work now should use the new colours already, but you're still allowed to use the old ones if you've got left-over bits of cable for now.
Current colours: Red, Yellow and Blue denote the 3 phases, Black denotes neutral, and Green (sometimes with yellow stripes) denotes earth. And this is all very well and makes pefect sense as long as you're not colour-blind. If you are, then electrician is one of those jobs which is not for you.
Until the EU got their way, at which point they decided to change all the colours. Oh, and you don't refer to the phases by colour anymore - you label them "L1", "L2" and "L3" instead. So the new colours are Brown, Black and Grey for the phases, Blue for neutral, and Green with Yellow stripes for the earth.
Have you worked out the fun part yet? This table might help:
| L1 | L2 | L3 | N | E | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| old | |||||
| new | // |
no subject
Date: 2005-08-04 01:13 pm (UTC)With things like “Beer must be 5% alc. V/V if you want to export it” and “countries can have this and that amount of winegrape production, the rest must be taken out, otherwise pay a fee” are things I find unbelievably stupid. And this, this too.
no subject
Date: 2005-08-04 05:17 pm (UTC)Europe became the EU, and then decided to harmonise colours for 3-phase kit. Now, since this is the age of political correctness, they decided to go for colours which colourblind people can tell apart. Which is why they added black to the phases, and then grey. And of course since .uk is part of the EU, we should adopt their colours.
The whole thing only falls apart when you consider the UK, and the fact that we've had blue and black the other way round for decades.
no subject
Date: 2005-08-04 04:44 pm (UTC)Of course, I haven't done THAT much... But I've never seen a red-black-green.
Nonetheless, interesting times, and all that, eh?
no subject
Date: 2005-08-04 05:14 pm (UTC)I'm not actually sure what happens if you swap phase and neutral. I'd imagine most single-phase stuff wouldn't care (stuff like light bulbs doesn't care *what* you feed it as long as there's power there, and modern switching power supplies can sometimes be run off anything from 90v to 250v AC or about 110-300v DC.
I'd guess it would get more interesting with stuff that actually uses all 3 phases. There was one tale I came across of when someone swapped a pair of phases to an olden days hard disk, and the motor ran backwards (which resulted in the heads going down instead of up with the resulting Bad Things that happen when hard disk heads impact the platters).
no subject
Date: 2005-08-04 05:20 pm (UTC)Swapping phase and neutral shouldn't make any difference, assuming it's going through a decent PSU. Might have amusing effects on older televisions and monitors.