How to determine which is earth wire.

Submitted: Saturday, Dec 07, 2024 at 19:12
ThreadID: 149265 Views:1528 Replies:15 FollowUps:19
I did a stupid thing. I wanted to fit Anderson plugs to my 12v compressor so I could then use it either connected direct to the battery with the supplied alligator clips or the Anderson plug at the rear of the vehicle. I cut the wires to fit the Anderson plugs without marking which one was positive and which one was negative. So now I have one set of wires with red and black alligator clamps so that parts ok but the other wires going into the compressor are not marked.
Is there a way to determine which is the earth wire on the compressor. I can’t partly disassemble the compressor to chase the wire so hoping there is a simple way maybe using a multimeter.
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Reply By: Bricky - Saturday, Dec 07, 2024 at 20:27

Saturday, Dec 07, 2024 at 20:27
Definitely not a sparky but....
Could you get a multimeter and check the resistance between each wire and a metal part of the compressor body??
AnswerID: 646910

Reply By: RMD - Saturday, Dec 07, 2024 at 20:45

Saturday, Dec 07, 2024 at 20:45
Malken
If the wires to the compressor are unmarked as for + or - , OR STRIPE FOR POS OR NEG, then it may not matter at all. Nice if you can replicate it, but I doubt any wires will be connected to the case of the compressor. Testing there futile! Since the compressor.motor is simply rotating when 12v is applied, electric motors and the compressor uses rotary motion to reciprocating motion to pump the piston. Probably the polarity will not matter as the motor will run happily in both directions. One way may make it run faster though and that direction/polarity connection is what I would use. If there is some electronic control or controller in the mix, THEN THE POLARITY will matter. What brand is it? Others with same same might be able to give you the connections as .OE
AnswerID: 646911

Reply By: malken - Saturday, Dec 07, 2024 at 21:52

Saturday, Dec 07, 2024 at 21:52
Thanks for your replies. I’m an amateur so any tech talk is above my pay grade. It’s a Kings Thumper Max Dual mk2.
AnswerID: 646912

Reply By: IvanTheTerrible - Saturday, Dec 07, 2024 at 22:03

Saturday, Dec 07, 2024 at 22:03
Positive and Neg are usually marked on the plug




Negative - is the earth
AnswerID: 646913

Reply By: Allan B (Sunshine Coast) - Sunday, Dec 08, 2024 at 04:49

Sunday, Dec 08, 2024 at 04:49
Cable pairs without colour usually have a polarity marking in the form of a small raised ridge running along one side of the cable. It is common practice for this to be the negative but you can verify it by following that ridge to the cut-off alligator clamps to determine the polarity.
Failing this, polarity probably does not matter and as RMD says you can connect either way. Testing with a meter will not provide a certain answer.
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Allan

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AnswerID: 646914

Follow Up By: Member - LeighW - Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 at 10:40

Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 at 10:40
"It is common practice for this to be the negative but you can verify it by following that ridge to the cut-off alligator clamps to determine the polarity"

I was curious about that as I would have thought the marked wire would be positive so I went and dragged out the three items I have with 12V cords on them and on all three the positive wire was the one marked with the ridge so maybe not as common as you thought Alan.
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Follow Up By: Allan B (Sunshine Coast) - Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 at 11:09

Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 at 11:09
.
Well maybe I was wrong about that and your comprehensive survey has enlightened the engineering world. Or just maybe my extensive spread of experience provided a more comprehensive database. Did you consider that your three reviewed products possibly came out of the one Chinese factory?
But I give you credit for knowing how to flog a dead horse in order to score a worthless point.
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Follow Up By: Member - LeighW - Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 at 11:22

Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 at 11:22
Alan,

You are well know to criticise others for posting what you consider to be disinformation or a view point that differs from your own but it seems you don't like it when the same applies to you.

The three items in my garage, a 12v compressor, a 12V rattle gun and a 12V hydraulic jack were all made by different manufacturers and purchased over many years.

In my personnaly experience I have seldom seen the negative wire as the the marked one, generally it traced wire that is the positive.
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Follow Up By: Allan B (Sunshine Coast) - Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 at 11:39

Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 at 11:39
As a matter of interest I Googled “what does the ridge on a two core cable represent”.
Try it Leigh.
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Allan

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Follow Up By: Member - LeighW - Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 at 13:20

Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 at 13:20
Well lets see:

"The ridge or ribbing on a two-core cable indicates the neutral wire. The neutral wire is also identified by white insulation or a white stripe"

And

"The neutral wire is identified by a white stripe, ribbing or white insulation"

But then as you know we are talking extra low voltage DC here and not AC:

"Traditionally the line that is marked (whether with a colored/painted line or groove) is positive"
"Usually cable with white dashes means that that wire is VCC (i.e +12V)"

"the wire with the white stripe or the dashed lines carries the "positive" (+) end"

I have always found with DC the "indicator" has been the positive side this includes the units I mentioned above and not to mention the mirade of power pack units I have seen. But then others have indicated the ridge is negative on their units, so seems there is no common practice in the world of DC. Personnaly if I'm going to change a plug etc I always check before I chop of the old one off what the polarities are.
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Follow Up By: Allan B (Sunshine Coast) - Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 at 14:52

Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 at 14:52
Yes, there are no universal standards on this and even if there were I would expect the Chinese to do it their way, whatever. Being no 12V industry standard it seemed logical for me to extend the LV industry standard and that seemed the American way. But I must say that they dedicate white for neutral and black for active in LV applications where the conductors have independent colours.

Malken has said that he realised his error too late but now has it by the ‘Short and curlies’. But I would like a Dollar for every time I forgot to slide the plug top cover onto the flex before terminating. I’ m afraid we are not all perfect. Although I can spell your name correctly. lol.
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Allan

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Reply By: Mikee5 - Sunday, Dec 08, 2024 at 09:18

Sunday, Dec 08, 2024 at 09:18
OK, I just went to the shed and checked my Kings compressor. The positive wire has a slightly raised ridge on the outer edge. Hope that helps.
AnswerID: 646915

Reply By: Hoyks - Sunday, Dec 08, 2024 at 14:08

Sunday, Dec 08, 2024 at 14:08
I'd get a multi meter and check continuity from the case to the wires. Earth should be the one that has low resistance.

Failing that, take the end cap off where the on/off switch is located and the positive will go to the switch.

The compressor should run either way, but if you have it arse about and the case is live when the compressor is switched is off, it may make for a spectacular light show if it shorts out with the vehicle body work, or you'll be blowing fuses and wondering why.
AnswerID: 646918

Follow Up By: RMD - Sunday, Dec 08, 2024 at 15:41

Sunday, Dec 08, 2024 at 15:41
HOYKS.
The problem is: neither of the wires will be connected to the case of the compressor so the chance of shorts is eliminated from case contact.
I have 4 different 12v compressors and all are straight to motor after the switch; if present. No connections to case.
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Reply By: Kazza055 - Sunday, Dec 08, 2024 at 15:52

Sunday, Dec 08, 2024 at 15:52
Just try it one way, if it sucks all the air out of the tyre you know it is back to front ;=))

From my experience the trace wire, the one with the Ridge is more than likely negative.
AnswerID: 646919

Reply By: tonysmc - Sunday, Dec 08, 2024 at 17:08

Sunday, Dec 08, 2024 at 17:08
Probably doesn't help you but I just checked my Blackmax Bushranger and the wire with the ridge is the positive wire.
AnswerID: 646920

Reply By: Member - LeighW - Sunday, Dec 08, 2024 at 20:15

Sunday, Dec 08, 2024 at 20:15
Small 12V compress are generally a one stroke device, ie they draw air in on the downward stroke and compress it on the upward stroke and as such are non directional.

Only other aspects are if it has a led light on it it won't work if the polarity is wrong so just test run it first. The motor may not run as well in one direction as the other so test run it to find which is best.
AnswerID: 646921

Follow Up By: RMD - Monday, Dec 09, 2024 at 11:07

Monday, Dec 09, 2024 at 11:07
Leigh
Are you serious! ONE STROKE means the piston goes down and NEVER goes UP AGAIN. ALL compressors are TWO stroke. DOWN and UP is 2 strokes after all. My Whipper snipper relies on the concept to operate. A compressor must draw in air on a downward stroke. ALL compressors with pistons can pump air with their crank running in either direction. Lube supply critical!
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Follow Up By: Member - LeighW - Tuesday, Dec 10, 2024 at 09:35

Tuesday, Dec 10, 2024 at 09:35
RMD,

I believe all except you it appears understood what I meant when I wrote:

"they draw air in on the downward stroke and compress it on the upward stroke"
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Follow Up By: RMD - Tuesday, Dec 10, 2024 at 15:11

Tuesday, Dec 10, 2024 at 15:11
So they really are 2 stroke and not ONE stroke devices then? I see what you meant too, but it wasn't what you first said. Sort of cuts out being a "ONE STROKE DEVICE"!
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Follow Up By: Member - LeighW - Tuesday, Dec 10, 2024 at 15:32

Tuesday, Dec 10, 2024 at 15:32
You know you if spent as much time providing useful information as you do critiquing what others write this forum would be a much more helpful and friendly one and also have more members.
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Reply By: Member - Bigfish - Monday, Dec 09, 2024 at 07:36

Monday, Dec 09, 2024 at 07:36
So at the end of the day either the positive or negative can have a ridge on the insulation. I know from experience with 12 volt plugs that this is true. I always perform a continuity test with a multimeter as I have been caught out before by "assuming".....
AnswerID: 646922

Follow Up By: RMD - Monday, Dec 09, 2024 at 16:17

Monday, Dec 09, 2024 at 16:17
Bigfish
SO a ridge in a wire only ID's the SAME WIRE and not polarity.
Good point, NOT to ASSUME! On some items the Smoke can indicate the wrong polarity. Usually a definitive test!
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Reply By: malken - Monday, Dec 09, 2024 at 11:05

Monday, Dec 09, 2024 at 11:05
Success. Alan B was on track. There is a slight ridge on the positive wire, very small and easy to overlook. All working now. Thanks for all the suggestions.
AnswerID: 646925

Follow Up By: Michael ( Moss Vale NSW) - Monday, Dec 09, 2024 at 16:35

Monday, Dec 09, 2024 at 16:35
Also Mikee5 was correct too, he took the time to check his same compressor and came to the same conclusion.
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Follow Up By: Member - Bigfish - Tuesday, Dec 10, 2024 at 09:12

Tuesday, Dec 10, 2024 at 09:12
I checked mine yesterday out of interest. The ridge on mine is on the negative....As I said...do not assume as you have a 50/50 chance of being wrong. It shouldn,t affect the compressor but on most other 12 volt gear it could cause a melt down.
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Reply By: Allan B (Sunshine Coast) - Tuesday, Dec 10, 2024 at 20:41

Tuesday, Dec 10, 2024 at 20:41
Blimey, how can such a simple question get so complicated?
Malken simply asked how to identify the polarity of his wires and I told him. No meters, no dismantling, just follow the trace to the clips.
Seems some cannot leave it at that but must add their two bob’s worth and go off on all sorts of tangents and arguments which add nothing necessary and simply confuse the OP.
Rivalry seems to have become a norm on this forum. And don’t come at me with argument about “other points of view”. That is not what I am on about.
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Allan

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AnswerID: 646931

Follow Up By: RMD - Wednesday, Dec 11, 2024 at 19:27

Wednesday, Dec 11, 2024 at 19:27
Allan.
I have previously seen comments after posts that the exchanges should be like discussions around a campfire. Yes, some departure from the OP's initial question may occur. Simply answering with a short reply may solve it for the poster, but often, other information revealed allows some learning to occur if folk are unsure. That way, peoples understanding and knowledge and ability might be increased. A positive thing. Is campfire talk to be ended? Nothing wrong with above replies or content , just some clarification too!
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Follow Up By: qldcamper - Sunday, Dec 15, 2024 at 08:24

Sunday, Dec 15, 2024 at 08:24
RMD,
I see completely where you are comming from and agree, but I also see where Allan is comming from.
Sitting round a camp fire with this lot that refuse to compromise or learn anything from other peoples experience would lead to someone getting stabbed.
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FollowupID: 927705

Reply By: Nick H10 - Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024 at 00:33

Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024 at 00:33
You could use a multimeter to test polarity on your compressor, and also check the wires near your iphone 8 charger.
AnswerID: 646965

Reply By: Jarse - Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024 at 12:29

Tuesday, Dec 17, 2024 at 12:29
If you put the multimeter onto the power wires the with wrong polarity, you should get -12v, instead of 12v (or whatever the system voltage is). That's how my multimeters display incorrect polarity.

Pretty simple really.
AnswerID: 646968

Follow Up By: Allan B (Sunshine Coast) - Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 at 03:13

Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 at 03:13
Jarse, Malken says he is left with a pair of wires connected to his compressor with no apparent polarity markings. How is a multimeter, applied to those wires going to detect voltage?
Pretty simple, really?
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Allan

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Follow Up By: Jarse - Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 at 05:38

Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 at 05:38
Hi Allan, I was writing about the power source wires, as I misread the original post. If it is the wires are from the compressor, then some disassembly (of the compressor case) may be the only way to investigate further.

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Follow Up By: Allan B (Sunshine Coast) - Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 at 09:47

Wednesday, Dec 18, 2024 at 09:47
Jarse, if you had read Malken’s original post and my reply carefully you may have understood this as a very simple exercise which Malken has already acknowledged as solving his problem. The last thing Malken should do is to dismantle the compressor which is entirely unnecessary anyway.
No offence intended but these off-the-cuff responses only serve to confuse the enquirer.
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Allan

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