2 Black Wires And 2 White Wires
Plus a black a red and a white from the other direction.
2 black wires and 2 white wires. Connect the two white wires from the light fixture to the white wire located in the electrical box by twisting an orange wire nut onto all three wires. A black and a white coming from one side. According to standards in use since the mid 1900s a wire color code identifies the purpose of each wire in an electrical circuit. Do not connect to neutral.
The wall switch has a red on the bottom and a black on the top. The nearby hall is somehow connected to this light too. In a outlet the ground wire is green or bare copper. The first box has 2 black wires and 2 white wires and the ballast has one white and one black.
Then using a permanent black marker color the last 3 of the white wire and connect that to the brass screw of the light fixture. Green both black wires also say. Black wire is hot wire and the white is the common or white is ground. The ground wire is usually left bare but in some cases the ground wire color is green.
The 2 black wires were capped together and the 2 white wires were capped together manual says to connect the red fan wire to the black ceiling wire the white fan wire to the white ceiling wire. To turn the light on and off you interrupt the power going to the light by the switch breaking contact between the black wires. Each lightbulb socket must have a separate black and white wire to supply electricity to the lightbulb. The white wires are neutrals and the black wire is the hot leg.
If the light fixture has leads then connect the reidentified white wire to the black wire. I assume that i should connect 1 on the switch to the black coming out of the wall and the 2 to the white wire. Since we have a black wire our switched hot coming from the switch and its matching white always hot in the switch loop nutted to two black wires in back we know that the black wire landing on the fixture is a switched hot and the two white wires landing on the current fixture. Black to power supply 2.
The more lightbulbs the more wires. Putting a black directly to a white creates a direct short which is what blew the fuse. The white wire is always neutral and when the cable has only two conductors as most 120 volt cables do the hot wire is black. I took down an old ceiling fan and am replacing it with a simple light.
Black to fan 3. Connect the two existing white wires at the light fixture to the silver screw of the light. Depends on what your talking about in an outlet or car battery. The light has 2 blacks 2 whites and a ground.
The new switch has two black wires and a green 1. Just wirenut the two white wires that were connected to the old fixture to the white wire from the new fixture.