Gina Marie said:
Thanks for the reply's . MikeP996 I will run a meter between the black wire coming out of the battery switch that is mounted to the wall and the block of the engine. If it tones I will attach to - Negative. Vis a versa if it don't.
Thanks again for the reply's
.
The wire attached to the switch BETTER BE positive.
If its not, then whoever wired that did it very, very wrong (and dangerously so.)
Ground on a 12V system must NEVER be switched - only HOT.
The reason is the same with high voltage (e.g. 120V) service - you NEVER switch neutral, always hot.
Why? Because if you switch neutral (or ground) then there is a very real risk that someone will think the circuit is "off" when the switch is open, and end up shorting it to ground, producing major sparks (and in the case of a HV circuit, possible electrocution)
When high-current systems are involved (e.g. storage batteries) the result of that sort of miswiring and an accident can be actual electrical explosions or serious electrical burns - even with a 12V system.
White/Black is NON-STANDARD for DC systems. DC should be RED/YELLOW or RED/BLACK. White is the color for AC neutral and should NEVER be used in a DC system.
Tone it out - disconnect both leads of the battery, put meter on VOLTS, turn the switch on, and check each wire between itself and the case of the generator. NEITHER should show any voltage (always do this first before you do an ohm test - just in case - to keep from frying your meter!)
Then ohm each lead from the lead to the generator case. One should show open (infinite ohms), the other zero ohms.
The zero ohms lead is negative (assuming a standard, negative-ground system)
If that lead is the one that goes through the switch then fix the wiring, and while you're at it, change the positive to a RED wire (black is ok for negative, although yellow is better, as it cannot be confused with 120VAC HOT.)