Any marking (a white stripe, bump molded into the cable, different wire colours) is an indication for your reference only. It doesn't matter, as long as you connect the marked side on the amplifier to the same polarity on the speaker side.
I always use the black stripe as negative signal. Always do this and then when you have to disconnect something you won't get confused.(or as confused) but honestly it's just wire it's up to you.
It is Red with a black stripe
It doesn't really matter, as long as you connect them to the same polarity at both ends. Most people use the gold or reddish-copper wire as the positive, as it is the red terminal and the silver, or non-colored lead to the negative as it is black.
Gray Connector wire color stripe color dk blue = mute black/lt.green = ground lt.blue/red = panel illumination yellow/black = radio power feed black = vehicle chasiss ground lt.green/purple = memory feed BLACK CONNECTOR wire color stripe color orange/red =rt rear spk brown/pink = rt rear spk grnd dk.green/orange =rt fr spk white/lt.green =rt ft spk grnd gray/lt.blue = L rear spk tan/yellow = L rear spk grnd lt.blue/white =L ft spk orangr/lt.green = Lft spk grnd
A black velvet nose, a master of black and white, and black beady eyes
Yellow: 12v memory Red: 12v ignition (switched) Orange: Dash Light Black: Radio Chassis Ground Blue: Power Antennae White: Left Front positive White/Black Stripe: Left Front Negative Green: LR positive Green/Black Stripe: LR negative Grey: RF positive Grey/Black Stripe: RF negative Violet: RR positive Violet/Black Stripe: RR negative
I always use the black stripe as negative signal. Always do this and then when you have to disconnect something you won't get confused.(or as confused) but honestly it's just wire it's up to you.
Red is positive and black is negative.
In a DC circuit Red is positive and Black is negative. In AC systems White is neutral and Ground is green or green-yellow stripe.
Black is negative - Red is positive +
White is neutral in home wiring. Red is sometimes used in 3-way switches and dimmer applications, so it is likely red is hot in your application if it pertains to home wiring. The term positive would just apply to DC wiring since AC goes positive and negative. For example your car battery has Red as Positive and Black as Negative.
Positive is normally red or white with a red stripe. Negative is usually green or on rare occasions black. A multimeter will verify this.
Black = Negative Black + White = Positive Tried and tested.
Black with white stripe = Positive. I tested this with a AC to DC wall plug. ________________________ It really doesn't matter if you connecting the wire yourself. As long as you define one as positive and the other as negative and keep that same definition throughout the system, it will work.
Yes, black represents negative and red represents positive.
Neither.
A photograph turns black in light negative. In a photographic negative, the areas that receive more light appear black when the negative is converted to a positive image.