Universal Color Codes for Wiring?

jdduffield

Active member
I’m wondering what the universal color codes are for wiring. Here is what I’ve been using, but wondering if that is confusing for anyone opening up my pedals later.

Red: Positive
Black: Negative or Ground
Green: Ground
Yellow: Input
Blue: Output
White: Jumpers
 
The first three, red, black and green, are commonly used in general electronics as you list.

I like that you distinguish between ground and negative, ground should never carry current.
 
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The first three, red, black and green, are commonly used in general electronics as you list.

I like that you distinguish between ground and negative, ground should never carry current.
I wonder if keeping the two separate negates the need to make a clean power stage with a polarized cap. Like if current leaks into the main ground plate causing unwanted noises like pot scratching.
 
Having your own color coding is perfectly acceptable.
I had seen a YouTube video where someone had yellow as output and blue as input, which is opposite of what I’ve been doing. I was thinking maybe I was doing that backwards or something but seems the consensus is that it is just fine after all (to use whatever color I want for in and out).
 
Nope, for example, when it comes to electrical wiring the black wire is hot.

Had a guy standing on a ladder tell me the white wire "will never shock you" ... I guess he didn't consider that a previous electrician could have mixed them up.
Haha. You kicked him of the ladder? Electrical wiring Netherlands: Brown is fase. (230v) Blue is zero. Black is switchwire, green/yellow earthwire.
 
FWIW, I use white for input (makes me think of innocent, celestial, bride, not f*cked with yet) and yellow for output (the idea being that it's more colored than the input). Red is always the positive rail and ground is black. If there's a negative rail, I'll pick a cold color like blue or purple.
 
Had a guy standing on a ladder tell me the white wire "will never shock you" ... I guess he didn't consider that a previous electrician could have mixed them up.

“Guy on a ladder” is the correct title for this character. No legit Electrician would say something this dumb.

Other than red and black for power, the only thing I consistently color code is offboard-wired pots. So I can easily visually distinguish lugs 1, 2, and 3 (generally do Brown Orange Yellow).
 
In aerospace ( at least everything I ever worked on ) all the wires are white (tefzel) with identifiers printed on them if it’s on the original type certificate, or done at a reputable repair station, in automotive and I think most consumers electronics color coding is specific to the make and model of the product, most might have a legend telling what is what, but the safest bet is to know exactly what you are dealing with and consult the schematic, you never know what someone else did.
 
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