is this means that the load wire does not matter which one goes where?
is this means that the load wire does not matter which one goes where?
Getting close to the finish line but unsure about the load 1 and 2 lines, does it matter which color (white or black) goes where? TIA.
The RJ has black and white, so on my control panel it only label as load out. Not sure which is neutral. is the proposed below correct?LOAD is hot wires. DO NOT put the white neutral wire on that relay!!
The RJ has black and white, so on my control panel it only label as load out. Not sure which is neutral. is the proposed below correct?
Yes, it is 110 as I’ve confirmed with a multimeter reader, also the controls box says 120 VAC. So I should only need the load wire connect to the load & put the white wires to the neutral (see pic) which I see it has the column below in my box, is this right? Also I’ve already set the jumper to 120 V.A relay is like a light switch. ONLY the hot wires go through it. The neutral (and ground) connect to a common neutral and ground. Is that 110 volt?
Glad you got it going. You may know this, but don't power on the unit until all salt is dissolved and you confirm the proper level with your test kit. You already have salt in the pool from chlorine and other chemicals, so test before you add salt.I got it running, the white one does go to the neutral as indicated and now I just start to put the salt in and we'll see how it goes in 24 hrs. Thanks for all the help.
Yeah, understood, I've dumped in 8 bags and after a few days, my salinity avg is 3800 so it is within range of suggested. Setting up the output like 40% and it is producing chlorine keeping it around 4.5ppm. I only have the pump runs 5 hr on high during the day and 6 hr on low during night. Thanks for all your help. attached is my completed installation.Glad you got it going. You may know this, but don't power on the unit until all salt is dissolved and you confirm the proper level with your test kit. You already have salt in the pool from chlorine and other chemicals, so test before you add salt.
Best of luck!