As clear as I can be, as I've said before; I have a cobalt (spelling) color I.D. My hand comes out as something like dark pink. If it's a red wire I get something like dark red and if it's a black wire in my hand I get dark purple. So white comes out as light pink. This is because the color identifiers blend the colors. A striped white shirt, will be very light gray if the stripes are gray and light gray if the stripes are black. Does that make sense to anyone; I want to be clear with the reality of the process and resultant opportunities for our independance. Best to you all.
On Sat, 27 Mar 2010, Rick Hume wrote: > Hey, Terry, I've asked dozens of people about this before, without anyone > being able to supply a precise answer. You say that you use a color > identifier. I assume that you use it to determine wire coating colors? Does > your color identifier accurately identify the color of wire coatings? What > make and model of identifier do you have? Thank you for your information. > > Rick > ----- Original Message ----- > From: Terry Klarich > To: blindhandyman@yahoogroups.com > Sent: Friday, March 26, 2010 9:02 PM > Subject: [BlindHandyMan] talking multimeter > > > > Just got my multimeter yesterday. Already used it on the sailboat trailer. > Works great. I appreciate the info very much. > Anything I can do completely by myself makes my life much easier. With the > multimeter and my color identifier, I'm pretty much set > as far as wiring goes. I'm pretty pumped. > > Thank you all very much. > > Terry > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > >