Installation Of A Sunsmart Digital Timer
I am trying to install a SunSmart Digital Timer to my hall lightswitch (single pole). The timer has 5 wires: Black, White, Blue, Red, and Green. My switch box only has 3 wires: Black, White, and the bare ground wire. I connected the black to the black, white to white, and green to the bare ground. I have power to the timer but the light doesn't work. What should I do with the blue and red wires? Right now I have each capped off. Thanks.
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I am trying to connect the Digital Timer switch to a 3 way switch. My issue is that the existing switch has 4 wires, Red, Black, White and Ground.
The Digital Timer has 5 wires, Red, Black, White, Blue and Ground (green). I can't understand how to connect it. Any help is appreciated.
I have an outdoor light fixture that I am trying to replace. The house was built ten years ago.
When I removed the original lamp, I noticed one of the two leads was wired to the ground, and one was wired to the black wire, which is hot per my current sensor. There are three wires in the box - black, ground (bare copper), and white or neutral, all from a single romex cable. Unfortunately, I do not recall where the white was when I removed the original. I wired the new lamp per the instructions, something I have done many times before - black to black, white to white, and bare copper ground to ground. Nothing. The lamp and bulbs are brand new, and I have tried four separate bulbs. I checked the black and neutral with my current sensor and with the switch on and the lamp installed this way, both show as hot. With the lamp not installed, the switch on, and the wires disconnected only the black shows as hot. The switch is single pole, and appears to be wired correctly with a black to each screw on one side and a copper ground on the other. Assuming the new fixture was bad, I reinstalled the old fixture correctly - black to black, white to white, and bare copper ground to ground. Still nothing. No light, and I confirmed the bulb is good by putting it in another lamp. The only way to get it to light is to connect the neutral in the lamp to the bare copper ground. I capped the wires, turned the circuit back on, and identified all the outlets, switches and fixtures on the same circuit. I opened every one of them up (four lights and eight outlets) and found three (one switch and two fixtures in another room) where multiple commons connect. All were properly connected. My outlet tester shows all outlets as "correct". I found no instances of grounds connected to commons or vice-versa. Any ideas? Is it proper to wire this thing the way I found it? Thanks for any and all advice!
Hello -
I'm attempting to install a new bathroom vent fan / light combo. I pulled out the old one from the ceiling and am ready to install the new one. I'm not sure how to wire up the new one. The wire coming from the 2 Switches/Wall has the following 4 wires: Black, White, Red, Bare Copper Ground The wires coming from the Light/Fan Unit a Light: Black, White, Red Fan: Black, White Fan/Light Housing: Green Ground Wire Any help would be appreciated. Thanks!
Hi, I recently moved into a 1954 house with a 20amp electrical system, not the old fuse type, but there are no ground wires.
I removed an old light and replaced it with a light fan combo. As I removed the old light (after turning off the breaker) I noticed from the ceiling that there were 2 white wires tied together with a wire nut and 2 black wires, one attached to the white wire in the light and the other attached to the black one from the light. Feeling this was wrong and should be black to black, white to white, (even knowing full well the light was working fine before I disconnected it) I wired the fan the way I've always wired fan lights, white to white, blue and black to black. (again, knowing full well the light was working the other way). Turned breaker on then powered on switch. POP at the switch, breaker switched off. I reworked it back to the way it was before with whites tied off, black to white, black and blue to black, turned it back on and viola, things worked fine. (I know, duh... Right???) 2 questions from this experience... 1. Why would the 2 whites be tied off with only black wires used? And 2. It seems that one of the light switches in the same circuit as the blown one is now working soft. In other words, it used to make the normal click noise when turned on/off but now it just moves softly up and down without the click. Could I have damaged something when I mis-wired?
Greetings!
I'm hoping for some help, I bought a house recently where the laundry room light switch does not work. I found this in the ceiling box: Two black wires capped off One white wire capped off Three white wires going to the fixture Two black wires going to the fixture I replaces the switch to rule that out and it still doesn't work. There is one black and one white wire going to the switch. Any ideas on how to wire it properly? Thanks!
Hello,
I am replacing a bath light and I am a bit confused by the wiring. I can reattach the wires with the new fixture exactly like the old fixuture was attached but the old fixture did not have a ground connection. Here is how the wires a Two whites connected to each other but not to the fixture. One white and one bare copper wire (I thought it was the ground) connected together and to the white wire of the ligh fixture one black wire connected to the black wire of the light fixture How to I connect the the fixture green wire in this configuration? Thanks
Hello!
In a house I recently bought I have a strange situation. There is a three way switch on one side of the wall with two sets of wires coming in: Red, Black, White Black, White and then one stray Black that goes to the duplex receptacle on the other side of the wall (on the OUTSIDE of the wall! Clearly an afterthought.) Into the receptacle goes this strange black single wire from the light switch and the usual black and white wires + ground wire. I went to change the ugly receptacle to a decora and now it doesn't work, though I'm not 100% sure it worked before. I've wired the new receptacle as I remember it being wired before, any idea what is wrong? I've attached a diagram! Thanks in advance for any input.
My house has 240v outlet from the previous owner for a kiln of some sort. Im putting a tanning bed in its place. The plug on the tanning bed is a L6-30. I checked specs on the tanning bed and it requires a L6-30 recepticle and a 30amp circuit breaker. I went to the local home fixit store and found the correct recepticle and bought a 2-pole Siemens 30a circuit breaker. After shutting off the main breaker and using testing equipment I pulled out the 50a breaker and replaced it with the 30a..no problem. Heres where Im not sure....The L6-30 recepticle that goes in the wall has a X and a Y and a G marking on it. The G is grounding per instructions, w is white or grey, and X,Y,Z are black, red, blue or etc etc.The wires that come out of the house are red, black and a bare aluminum bradied type wire. Looking at the back from the top counterclockwise I hooked up the red, then black, then the bare nraided to the G (has green screw) Is the black and red correct? And why doesnt it say red, black and gound? Can anyone shed some light on this? Thanks!!!
Am doing a bathroom reno and installed a new fan. Original switch was a simple on off single pole. I want to install a DewPoint condensation fan switch that will turn on automatically at a certain moisture level.
The new switch as 4 wires. green ground, red fan, black power, and white neutral. I know the ground, but how do I hook up the neutral and fan to the existing fan set up? There is a double pole light switch in the same box that has a couple wires to it, and there is a mass of whites that I am not sure where they go Can I hook up the neutral somewhere else, or put it with the fan like a single pole? What do I do with this? In the attached picture the switch on the right is the 2 pole light switch and on the left is the fan switch that I hope to replace. Your Advice is appreciated
I have two 3-way switches in my master bath that have never worked properly. The house is very old and has been worked on over the years by many different people with greatly varying levels of skill. I was finally fed up with these switches and tried to fix them. I tried to follow instructions I found online, so with the power off I disconnected all the wires from both switches, then turned the power back on and used my volt-meter to discover which wire was hot. It turned out to the a red wire at switch #1. The other two wires are white and black (and yes, there also is a ground). I connected this hot wire to the darkest screw, connected the white and black to the other two screws and tried to test for continuity at the other switch. I couldn't get a reading on any of the wires at the other end. I tried turning the power back on and testing to see which wire was now hot at the second switch. It was the white wire, so I attached that to the darkest terminal, and attached the red and black to the other two terminals. The switches don't work any better than they did before I started - that is, both switches have to be turned on for the light to come on. What is my problem here? Thank you!
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