sorry i dont have that deviceHave you got a multimeter?
no idea. made in china. bought in malaysia. it was from some old computer related device. i kept the power cord to cannibalise it later. i am current trying to use it for connecting to an led spotlight which came with no power plug.For what country is this cord? There are standards for colors, particularly for ground and neutral. For example in the USA, Earth ground must be green or green/yellow..
Unless you have the original plug then and you can see where the wires go, you can't do much with it.sorry i dont have that device
yes here most plugs that i have opened up have blue neutral, brown live and green/yellow earth. this cord i am trying to use unfortunately cant be opened up at the plug point. i cut the other end which exposed the strange coloured wiresUnless you have the original plug then and you can see where the wires go, you can't do much with it.
UK earth is the same as the USA's green/yellow
For continuity checking a battery and a light will be entirely adequate to find which wire goes to which plug pin. And depending on the application line/neutral may not matter, except for those who panic at the thought of lne and neutral being swapped when feeding an isolated load such as a transformer primary. Jus t always unplug it before you grab the bare wires. A simple rule that always works.sorry i dont have that device
thanks for the adviceFor continuity checking a battery and a light will be entirely adequate to find which wire goes to which plug pin. And depending on the application line/neutral may not matter, except for those who panic at the thought of lne and neutral being swapped when feeding an isolated load such as a transformer primary. Jus t always unplug it before you grab the bare wires. A simple rule that always works.
by Duane Benson
by Duane Benson
by Don Wilcher