On Thu, Jun 26, 2003 at 07:20:12PM -0500, Robert Seeberger wrote: > Thinking further......the easy way to tell would be to look at each > individual socket. If it is parallel, you will have 4 wires at each socket. > hot in > hot out > neutral in > neutral out > > or perhaps there is an inline tap point along the wires.
The way I would do it would be to have each socket "bite" into the wires on each side. In manufacturing, I guess they would strip off a short length of the insulation on both of the wires for every socket, and then crimp each side of the socket on at each point along the parallel string (maybe that would be done by pressing/snapping the bottom piece of the socket together with the top piece, crimping the wires in between). Unless someone looks very carefully, it may be difficult to distinguish this sort of wiring from a series circuit where the end of the wire must loop back along the line to get back to the plug. > That's really the only way to do a parallel circuit. There's more than one way to do most things. -- "Erik Reuter" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> http://www.erikreuter.net/ _______________________________________________ http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l
