If the grounded neutral terminal is not visible, which labeling should be used next to the opening for the grounded conductor?

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Multiple Choice

If the grounded neutral terminal is not visible, which labeling should be used next to the opening for the grounded conductor?

Explanation:
The key idea here is correctly identifying conductors by color and labeling when the visual cue isn’t available. The neutral conductor is the grounded one, and it is consistently represented by white (or gray) color coding. If the terminal’s color or the wire color isn’t visible, marking the opening for that conductor with the word White or the letter W and coloring the opening white communicates clearly that this is the neutral connection, not a hot or grounding path. This matches standard practice where hot conductors are black or red, and the grounding conductor is green. Labeling it as Black, Green, or Red would misidentify the function and create safety risks.

The key idea here is correctly identifying conductors by color and labeling when the visual cue isn’t available. The neutral conductor is the grounded one, and it is consistently represented by white (or gray) color coding. If the terminal’s color or the wire color isn’t visible, marking the opening for that conductor with the word White or the letter W and coloring the opening white communicates clearly that this is the neutral connection, not a hot or grounding path. This matches standard practice where hot conductors are black or red, and the grounding conductor is green. Labeling it as Black, Green, or Red would misidentify the function and create safety risks.

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