Preferences and fetishes vary among individuals, and it is not appropriate or accurate to make generalizations about an entire group of people based on race or gender. It is important to approach discussions about relationships and desires with respect and understanding for individual choices and boundaries.
No, the white should be approximately zero and the black approximately 110-120, assuming the "bare ground" refers to a bare conductor attached to electrical ground.
The short answer is wire color to color. black to black, white to white, green or bare to green of bare.
Assuming the wires are the correct gauge for application and breaker you use black and white wires as hot. Put red electrical tape on each end of white wire and connect red and black to the breaker output and bare wire to ground lug in panel. At receptacle connect black and red to hot contacts and bare wire to ground lug.
Yes. Connect Black to Black, White to White and bare ground wires together.
On a 110 volt circuit, Black is hot, White is neutral, Green or bare Copper is ground. . Connect Black to the gold screw, White to the silver screw, and bare copper ground to the Green ground screw on the receptacle. On a 220 Volt circuit Black & Red are both hot, each carrying 110 volts for a total of 220. White is Neutral and ground is Green or bare copper.
The bare is ground. A bare conductor can only be used as a ground. The dryer doesn't need a neutral, its power flows from one hot (black) to the other (white). A load using only one hot needs a neutral to return to the panel. To make things easier to understand, when using 2 conductor w/ground romex for this (which already contains only black, white, and bare wires), I would color the white wire red with electrical tape on both ends. This way it won't be confused with a neutral.
If you are down stream from the switch then all blacks together, all whites together and all grounds (bare wires) together.
The green or bare wire is typically the ground wire for a dryer plug. If your wires are black, white, and red, the white wire is usually neutral, the black is hot, and the red is also hot. You should double check with a voltage tester to be certain.
The colours will be, black, white and a bare copper ground.
The white wire is typically neutral, the black wire is usually hot or live, the red wire may be a secondary live wire or used for a separate function, and the bare wire is typically the ground wire for safety purposes in an electrical circuit.
Snow petrels are all white birds with black beaks and eyes. They are size of a pigeon and are at risk so predators when bending on bare rock.
Connect the white wire from the European oven to the white wire in the US receptacle. Connect the black wire from the European oven to the black wire in the US receptacle. Connect the green wire from the European oven to the bare wire in the US receptacle. The green wire serves as the ground wire since you don't have a separate ground wire in the US receptacle.