Colour codes.

Graham_Wright

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30 Dec 2002
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8,194
Location
Gloucestershire
www.mastaclimba.com
I have always assumed that they run 0,1,2.3,4,5,6.7,8, .9..

I've just received cable tags with white labelled 1 and 9, sort of pink.
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/New-Cable-Markers-100-Colourful-C-Type-Marker-Number-Tag-Label-4-6mm-cat5-D13-UK/201795357626?_trkparms=aid%3D111001%26algo%3DREC.SEED%26ao%3D1%26asc%3D20160727114228%26meid%3D8dfd2a01db534d19877cdaf56e2f1e88%26pid%3D100290%26rk%3D1%26rkt%3D4%26sd%3D201795357626&_trksid=p2060778.c100290.m3507

Are there two standards?
 
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our sticky tag dispenser is the same code as your OP, and although we use numbered cable we still tag our standard loom parts for quick colour reference when fitting. For one off looms for customers who want simplicity to reference, we use different coloured cables.
Another thing we do for our modular engine looms is use different coloured heat shrink for each electrical component.
 
There are many many colour codes for numbers (not necessarily base 10 either)
blacK, browN, Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue, Violet, Slate, White is just one (note the capitalised letter in each, which is the standard single letter abbreviation)
Pink features in some military spec which is adopted by Phirrips.
UK telecoms have 2 x 5 colour sequences, line pairs are made of one wire from each sequence: individually identifying hot and cold of 25 pairs.
Some systems utilise stripes, dots and dashes of one colour over another. I had an old pinball machine wired thus with fun looms containing:
white
white with black stripe
white with black dots
white with black dashes
black with white dashes
black with white dots
black with white stripe
solid black.....
that were a real giggle to fix.
 
There are many many colour codes for numbers (not necessarily base 10 either)
blacK, browN, Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue, Violet, Slate, White is just one (note the capitalised letter in each, which is the standard single letter abbreviation)

I thought black was bk, brown bn and blue bu?

Single letter is quicker and sufficient if its your day job.
 
There are many many colour codes for numbers (not necessarily base 10 either)
blacK, browN, Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue, Violet, Slate, White is just one (note the capitalised letter in each, which is the standard single letter abbreviation)

I thought black was bk, brown bn and blue bu?

that's pretty much brit standard for wiring diagrams for the last few decades, those tiny letters I cant read anymore alongside the schematic
 
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