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4hv.org :: Forums :: General Science and Electronics
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DC power supply question

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magnetomotive
Mon Feb 11 2008, 08:59PM Print
magnetomotive Registered Member #267 Joined: Mon Feb 27 2006, 09:44PM
Location:
Posts: 46
I have a DC power supply that has the output wires exposed. There is a white wire and a bare copper wire. I need to know for sure which one is ground (negative) and which one is hot (positive), but I do not have a multimeter to test this.

My first thought was that white is the positive wire. Is this correct?
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Proud Mary
Mon Feb 11 2008, 10:34PM
Proud Mary Registered Member #543 Joined: Tue Feb 20 2007, 04:26PM
Location: UK
Posts: 4992
Assuming this is a relatively low voltage DC supply, then it should be safe to do the following

Extend your unknown wires, bare them at the very ends, and stick them in a glass of strong salt water made with ordinary kitchen salt. Take care you don't let the wires touch together which might damage your supply.[secure them with clothes' pegs etc to stop them wandering about in the glass] In a very short time you will begin to see:

Yellow-Green bubbles of chlorine gas forming at the anode (+) and colourless bubbles of hydrogen rising up from the cathode [-]

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Myke
Mon Feb 11 2008, 10:50PM
Myke Registered Member #540 Joined: Mon Feb 19 2007, 07:49PM
Location: MIT
Posts: 969
If you know the output voltage then you can connect a LED with an appropriate series resistor to see what is positive and what is negitive.
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magnetomotive
Mon Feb 11 2008, 11:46PM
magnetomotive Registered Member #267 Joined: Mon Feb 27 2006, 09:44PM
Location:
Posts: 46
Thanks for the suggestions. However, I do not have an LED or a resistor available, and the salt water idea does not sound safe at all.

It is a 12V supply rated at 10W. I was simply wondering if anyone here was familiar with wire color codes for DC supplies. I could not find a definite answer by searching google.
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Proud Mary
Tue Feb 12 2008, 12:27AM
Proud Mary Registered Member #543 Joined: Tue Feb 20 2007, 04:26PM
Location: UK
Posts: 4992
On the scale of things in this forum, you're not really likely to come to any great harm putting a pair of electrodes at 12V into some salt water, but you know your own situation better than I do!
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rp181
Tue Feb 12 2008, 01:19AM
rp181 Registered Member #1062 Joined: Tue Oct 16 2007, 02:01AM
Location:
Posts: 1529
put the wires in weak salt water and the one with most bubbles is -. Wont produce much chlorine and the chlorine that does come will probably dissolve in the water.
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Capper
Tue Feb 12 2008, 01:32AM
Capper Registered Member #914 Joined: Fri Jul 20 2007, 06:22PM
Location: South Bend, IN
Posts: 85
I was simply wondering if anyone here was familiar with wire color codes for DC supplies


There's no such thing. Every shop, every industry, even every country has their own color code standards, and none of them follow them. In the US, {most of the time, or some of the time, or sometimes} red wires are positive and black wires are negative, and bare copper wires are either a neutral, ground, or a shield.

We had a German intern here for a while, and his color code was red for negative, white for positive, and black was something else - caused quite some trouble while we were building test stands.

If you have co-axial cable, and the bare copper is wrapped around the white center wire, then I would assume the white wire to be the positive one. The LED test is a good one I use most of the time myself when I can't get to a volt meter.

Another trick is to use a small DC motor (or PC fan) and hook it to a known voltage like a 9V battery and watch what direction it spins, then put your power supply on it and watch what way it spins.


C@P
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Shaun
Tue Feb 12 2008, 02:01AM
Shaun Registered Member #690 Joined: Tue May 08 2007, 03:47AM
Location: New Jersey, USA
Posts: 616
The salt water idea is totally safe. The one that bubbles will be negative.

I think that if you are going to work on any type of electronics you should at the very least have a multimeter. It would make this a trivial issue requiring less than 5 seconds of your time. They can be had for $8 or so at places like hardware stores, radioshack, hell I've even seen 'em at Kmart.
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HV Enthusiast
Tue Feb 12 2008, 03:19AM
HV Enthusiast Registered Member #15 Joined: Thu Feb 02 2006, 01:11PM
Location:
Posts: 3068
magnetomotive wrote ...

Thanks for the suggestions. However, I do not have an LED or a resistor available, and the salt water idea does not sound safe at all.

It is a 12V supply rated at 10W. I was simply wondering if anyone here was familiar with wire color codes for DC supplies. I could not find a definite answer by searching google.

There are no universal color codes when it comes to supplies like that.

As others have said, you have several suggestions:

1) Get a cheap multimeter - you can get one for about $5.00 at radio shack
2) Get an LED - about $0.10 or you can probably find one
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magnetomotive
Tue Feb 12 2008, 03:37AM
magnetomotive Registered Member #267 Joined: Mon Feb 27 2006, 09:44PM
Location:
Posts: 46
Thanks for the help everyone. The wire is a coaxial-type like Capper said. The bare wire was ground.
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