Home Skills Wiring

Home Skills Wiring

Home Skills Wiring

content

  • Wiring safety Chapter
  • Understanding Circuits
  • Grounding and Polarization
  • Household Tools
  • Wire and Cable
  • Nm cable
  • Explorer Chapter
  • Wiring work
  • electrical box
  • boxes
  • Electrical Panel
  • Wall Switch
  • Home Skills Wiring
  • Types of Wall Switches
  • Test switch
  • socket wiring
  • GFCI outlets Chapter
  • Test Ship
  • GFCI and AFCI Circuit Breakers
  • Volt Dryer Outlet
  • volt outlet
  • ceiling lamp
  • Recessed Ceiling Light
  • cable projects
  • Smoke and CO Wire Alarms
  • home skills Wirin’
  • home skills
  • board heaters
  • ceiling fans Fix
  • lights
  • fluorescent lamps are repaired
  • national landmarks
  • Electrical Code
  • Metric conversion Index
  • Wiring Safety Chapter
  • Understanding Circuits
  • grounding and polarization
  • home wiring tools
  • wires and cables Cable
  • Nm
  • lines
  • Work with the pipe
  • Home wiring skills
  • electric box
  • installation boxes
  • electrical panel
  • Wall Switch
  • Wall Switches
  • Test switch
  • socket wiring
  • Homework Skills Telegraphy
  • gfci sockets
  • Home wiring skills
  • test cases
  • A home’s electrical system can be compared to a home’s plumbing system. Electricity flows through cables as water flows through pipes. Electricity and water come into the house, are distributed throughout the house, do their “work” and go out.
  • Home Skills Wiring
  • In plumbing systems, water first flows through a pressurized water supply. In electricity, the electric current first passes through the hot wire. The current flowing in the hot wire is also under stress. The pressure of the current is called voltage.
  • Large supply pipes carry more water than small pipes. Also, large wires carry more current than small wires. This current carrying capacity of a wire is called the amperage. Water can be used in faucets, faucets, and showers at home. Electricity is provided by sockets, switches, and lights.
  • Water and electricity are two streams. The main difference is that you can see the water (and touching it probably won’t kill you). Like electricity, water enters the device at high pressure and exits at low pressure.

Description

Download the Free Ebook “Home Wiring Series” Find lights, switches, outlets, boxes, wires, and more in PDF format under electrical wiring books.

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