I have two Fantastic Vents. One uses white and black for DC wires. Which is ground? I am getting confllicting answers. Some say white and some say black.
Brian Elfert
Brian,
I used white.
The way I found out for sure was to wire it then turn on the switch for out. If it pulls the air out, it's right.
HTH
Devin
I was always taught one little rule and its worked so far..If it begins with the letter B as in Black,Blue,Brown its the hot side
The orange installation instruction sheet that came with my three 6000s states the following...
Wire Color Code
Black: Positive or Fused
White: Negative or Ground
Jay
87 SaftLiner
Brian,
White.
Nick
Quote from: TomCat on September 04, 2006, 10:03:49 PM
The orange installation instruction sheet that came with my three 6000s states the following...
Wire Color Code
Black: Positive or Fused
White: Negative or Ground
Interesting. Why is black considered ground when the colors are red/black and white considered ground when the colors are white/black?
I used black/red for all of my 30 amp DC stuff. I have a bunch of 12 AWG wire that is white and black I want to use for DC, but I don't really want a different color ground.
Brian Elfert
Typically in A/C circuts, white is negative, green is ground. To differentiate from A/C, D/C circuts use black as ground, white or red as positive (or any other color than black). Bottom line-hook it up and see which way the fan rotates. Then you'll have it right. Good Luck, TomC
I believe you will find that the fan will rotate in the correct direction regardless of how the power is hooked up. To reverse the rotation of a DC fan (unless it is designed to be reverse operated) you have to tear into it and reverse the connection of the field or armature leads to get it to run in the opposite direction.
Regarding AC circuits, I have never heard of a negative connection. White is
neutral, green is
ground and black is
hot.
Richard
Quote from: TomC on September 05, 2006, 07:30:59 AM
Typically in A/C circuts, white is negative, green is ground. To differentiate from A/C, D/C circuts use black as ground, white or red as positive (or any other color than black). Bottom line-hook it up and see which way the fan rotates. Then you'll have it right. Good Luck, TomC
Ordinarily, I would agree with Richard about reversing the direction of a DC motor. That would be if it had a field winding. But, I am betting that the motor is a permanent magnet motor, so reversing the power in will reverse the rotation.
One clue is that the motors do not come with four wires, which you would need in order to make these reversible by throwing a switch, if they had a field winding. The other clue is that they are very low current motors.
For what it's worth.
Tom Caffrey
Suncatcher
Ketchikan, Alaska
I'm willing to bet a nickle that that revversing the power will not reverse the rotation! LOL
Richard
Quote from: pvcces on September 05, 2006, 02:49:19 PM
Ordinarily, I would agree with Richard about reversing the direction of a DC motor. That would be if it had a field winding. But, I am betting that the motor is a permanent magnet motor, so reversing the power in will reverse the rotation.
One clue is that the motors do not come with four wires, which you would need in order to make these reversible by throwing a switch, if they had a field winding. The other clue is that they are very low current motors.
For what it's worth.
Tom Caffrey
Suncatcher
Ketchikan, Alaska
Richard,
Showing my ignorance here, But I did hook up my fantastic fan backward. It did run backward. I have the model with the rain sensor and it has the reversible option. I mistakenly thought that black was the ground and hooked it up. When I turned it on I had to rewire it due to the fact that when the fan was switched to OUT it pulled air in. I tried to convince the wife that OUT meant outside air coming in, but she made me change it anyway.
Devin
P.S.
Where's my nickel? :D :D :D
Please see the caviat in my earlier response:
Quote(unless it is designed to be reverse operated)
[/b]
Richard
Quote from: Devin on September 05, 2006, 07:48:17 PM
Richard,
Showing my ignorance here, But I did hook up my fantastic fan backward. It did run backward. I have the model with the rain sensor and it has the reversible option. I mistakenly thought that black was the ground and hooked it up. When I turned it on I had to rewire it due to the fact that when the fan was switched to OUT it pulled air in. I tried to convince the wife that OUT meant outside air coming in, but she made me change it anyway.
Devin
P.S.
Where's my nickel? :D :D :D