pokemon said:
I don't know whether I am right, but don't we get an ac current at home for all appliances? so the Live and the Neutral wires should keep changing , should'nt they ? How can we decide where to put the fuse or connect the earth?
I'm sorry but please explain. I'm still in grade 10 so I don't know much, but know more than wat my friends know
Praveen
Someone may correct me If I am wrong but:
Which wire we chose to make neutral is more of a standard than anything. You could chose either wire to be "neutral". This is the wire that is referenced to ground. AC is alternating current, so you are right - the current flows both ways depending on the time interval and the frequency of the AC waveform. Most simple AC household appliances don't have polarity, but if you notice one plug may be bigger than the other, making it polarized. If you were to force the plug into an outlet the wrong way, the appliance would still work. Depending on the circuitry of the appliance and if it has a ground wire or not, the neutral wire just let's any components inside the appliance be referenced to ground.
Also, the ideal fuse location would be closest to the main power supply. The fuse is protecting the appliance from high current draw, and it is also protecting any house wiring from being shorted. In a simple DC example, say you have a battery, 20 feet of a pair of wires and a load. the fuse is in series with the load, about 4 inches (of wire) before the load. the load may malfunction, and draw too much current, tripping the fuse, preventing a possible fire or more damage to the load unit. Now with the same scenario let's say something sharp falls on the wiring before the fuse, shorting them together. Now there is a circuit consisting of only the battery and a very low resistance load, causing a lot of current and the wires will most likely get red hot and possibly start a fire. This is the reason the fuse is located closest to the battery, to protect the wire, or in the home case closet to where the main wiring is run into a house.
Also just to clear up on ground wires, because I always had trouble with the concept: If an appliance in your house has a ground prong, the third middle bottom prong on a plug, this wire is usually ran to the chassis of the appliance. Say you have a toaster, either of the neutral or hot wires shorts out inside the unit, touching the chassis. Without the ground wire, the toaster chassis is now "hot", if you touch it, the current is going to want to get to ground the easiest way it can, which in an unlucky case could be through you if you are touching the toaster chassis. With the ground wire though, the ground wire is going to Earth ground, literally through a big copper rod impregnated in the ground next to your house. Now if a wire shorts out to the chassis in the toaster, the current will return to ground through this wire. You may still conduct some electricity if you touch the toaster chassis, but chances are the ground wire is going to be an easier path to ground than your body, so the majority of the current will go through that route.
hope that helped somebody.