Posted by Clive India on 20/09/2022 09:05:34:
For me, it's never been important what colour the phases are in the cable, just so long as the other one can be identified.
Does anyone want to enlighten me?
It's much easier to wire a new plug or, or break into the wiring to replace a component (say an isolator switch that has failed) if all the power supply wiring in a machine is using one of the standard colour codes; doesn't really matter if its:
- the old Red-Yellow-Blue,
- the new Brown-Black-Grey, or even
- the American Black-Red-Blue and Brown-Orange-Yellow…
But in terms of making life easy down the line, it matters that they're clearly distinguishable, and the phases remain consistent with their colour code (e.g. there isn't a hidden point in the circuit where an L2 coloured wire swaps to being a L3 colour, even if the wires are changing from old to new colour codes).
At a push, wiring them all in a single colour, but tagging each wire with a number referencing back to a wiring diagram, as per panel-wiring practice can be OK…
But I for one would much prefer it if people reserved this for final drive wiring which goes through a reverse switch only, and maintained as much of the power transmission wiring in machines as is practical following one of the standard colour schemes.
I have developed strong opinions on the matter after repeatedly having to unpick the design choices of long since retired electricians and instrument techs who chose to repeatedly deviate from both standard practice and the original designs without ever thinking to update the wiring diagrams (even crudely annotating them with red pen or a pencil would have been be better than nothing).