Static In Me, Outlet Noises
I am renting a house and the strangest things have been happening since shortly after moving in. I am full of static but not in a way that I shock myself as one would normally think - it just raises my hair to a point of unmanageability and is turning it to straw.
I also am hearing little "clicks" from the wall outlets, moreso now than ever. It seems to affect me with soundwaves (long story) and I am so full of anxiety all the time now that I cannot live with my Mother any longer. I have recently acquired extra-sensitive hearing (don't know how or why) and because she won't wear her teeth, she whistles when speaking and puts me into huge startle mode. She is 87 and it's a trying situation anyway, but my symtoms have made it impossible for us to get along now. As I sit at my computer, I hear a noise in the wall, then hear a hissing/buzzing sound from the computer and am wondering if my proximity to it is only adding to everything else going on here. The house was remodeled awhile back but someone told me it appears as if they did a good job where electrical is concerned. Could it be I am attracting curents for some reason? I don't even know if this is humanly possible but I am in dire need of help and cannot afford an electrition to go through the entire house. Please, any help would greatly be appreciated! Similar Tutorials
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I had a tv plugged into an outlet in my garage. The tv crapped out due to bad wiring {I think}. The reason I say bad wiring is because when I have a radio plugged in I can hear static through the speakers due to the wiring. Garage was built in the 70's. What do I look for when checking the wiring from the house to the garage and then all the garage wiring itself?
Help! We decided to raise the ceiling in our kitchen for some new taller cabinets. We have 30" cabinets with a 7' drop ceiling. By taking out the drop ceiling we can go to an 8' ceiling with 36" cabinets. We just had the ceiling taken out and now I see I got a problem!
This is a 2 story home, the wall in question is a load bearing wall (runs through the center of the house) The main breaker panel is in this wall (the panel opening is in the adjacent family room) As you can see in the photos I cannot extend the wall up because all of the home wiring is in the way! I expected I might have to run longer wires but not this. Some ideas we've thought about... notch the double 2x4s (not sure how much I need to notch or allowed to) build a cove (box) and leave the wires like they are (might be an eyesore in our new kitchen) put up a large crown moulding along the entire wall (would be the only crown moulding in the house) extend the ceiling up 6-7" instead of 12" (should leave enough room for wire to stay) I'm leaning to the notching option if I can find a way to reinforce that section. Any ideas? thanks!
Hi everyone. I'm new here, so I hope I am not posting this in the wrong place.
Is there a good book or site with instructions and tips for running computer networking cable in the walls in existing construction? I did it in my former house, which was a one story Ranch house with a big crawlspace. It was very easy. But my current house is two stories on a slab. Not only can I not go under the house, but I need to get things to the second floor. I want network ports in at least six rooms, covering both floors and spanning the width of the house. I can put the patch panel in the coat closet in the middle of the house. I want the end result to look as clean as possible. I'm not ok with cables running outside of the walls. I am expecting to have to cut and patch a lot of drywall, but I'm sure there are right and wrong ways to go about this project. And ways that will result in as little drywall cutting as possible. And what about running perpendicular to joists? Is it ok to drill holes that way? Even if I do, that would require cutting a hole in the ceiling every few feet I think. I hope there's a better way. What resources should I read?
I have a 1960s house with EMT throughout.
I recently replaced 2 florecent fixtures in my basement with 4 LED lights in their own J-Boxes in the drop ceiling. I did the following: 1. Rerouted the the conduit from the light switch to the main j-box for the lights. (previously it was going directly into the fixture) 2. Ran 4 foot whips to each jbox holding the LED (metalic 14# wires) 3. Cut the old spliced wire (that was just twisted and taped) and used a wire nut 4. Replaced the switch with a dimmer The lights work great. Noticebale improvement and the dimmer is excellent. The issue is that the circuit for the kitchen is now tripping. I told my wife its just a coincidence, but she is sure I caused it. Its only happened 2x (1 day apart. Nothing unusual running on the circuit, only the fridge and the gas stove which as not in use) Can my "new" work possibly impact another circuit? What should I check? Any way to avoid re-doing my work? Things I noticed / may or may not be relevant: 1. Some of the EMT is directly in contact with a copper water pipe 2. The switch / dimmer isn't grounded 3. The wires in the jbox were nasty and old. There was corrosion on the jackets and the jbox. Looks like some water leaked down fromt the laundy above at some point in the last 40 years. 4. At some point (months ago) when I was in the basement I touched some of the EMT and something that was plugged in I swear I feld a shock. (just listing everything I can think of). I didn't think much of it at the time, but now my whole electrical system is suspect. 5. The tripped circuit (fridge, MW, stove) didn't appear to be tripped. The fridge wasn't on. When I turned off and back on the circuit the aplliances came back to life. Appliances less than 1 year old. 6. The clock on the range was reset at one point but I didn't think I turned on or off the circuit. The lights for the basement were switced off but still worked with the fridge circuit tripped. 7. We had a huge electrical storm right before I did the work 8. We have a "stablock" panel that the home inspector got all bent out of shape about. Other than truning on and off breakers I have never touched it. 9. Kitchen breaker and basement light breaker are adjacent in the box 10. I believe kitchen and basement share the same EMT in places. 11. I think I now have too many connectors in my j-box. Will likely add an extension. 12. I didn't use the red "bushing" on all my whips as I ran out of them, but I was careful with the metal sheath and really don't think any wires were cut. (besides if there was a short wouldn't my LED lights fail and that circut break?) HELP. I am happy to call a contractor to come in, but I don't have an electrician I trust yet and I'm scared bringing someone in before I isolate the problem a little.
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?
I'm new to this site. But would appreciate some troubleshooting. I just renovated my kitchen, gutted and all, finished in the Fall. I did not replace wiring to the dryer, nor tamper with it, to my knowledge. We did have an electrician add a small fuse panel. We did not add more appliances then before, added some lights, but mostly used the room to separate things out. Had a mentor do the wiring, many years of experience, very tidy and careful work, though not electrician by trade. We have a standard 200 amp box as far as i know. The house is 100 years old, but the wiring isn't.
In October my mother in law heard a very loud bang. The electric dryer had been running. She smelled smoke. At the dryer receptacle was molten plastic sprayed onto the wall, caused by overheating at that point, due to I don't know what. I thought maybe I had knocked something loose in the receptacle when i was drywalling around it. I can't remember now if the breaker had tripped. The receptacle and plug were toast. I replaced the receptacle, I replaced the dryer cord, not the breaker. The dryer worked fine until february, when it stopped heating. I found a bad thermal fuse and replaced it, the very common two pronged white one. The dryer worked fine until early April when it stopped heating again. I checked all the fuses/thermostats on the back and the heating element, as I had done the first time. Nothing was bad. I checked the voltage coming out of the wall, as I had done the first time, only this time I did it correctly and got a reading that told me to check the breaker in the panel, which had not thrown. When I checked the voltage between the Nuetral Bus and the two terminals on the Dryer's 30 amp breaker I only got a good reading on one of them, telling me that the breaker was bad. While at the box, i noticed that to the main breaker, from where the conduit comes into the box from outside, the nuetral wires are bare all the way up, no insulation, and at the terminal of the main breaker they appear to have all melted together, even a couple small pieces have melted off of the "bundle." Switched the range 50 amp breaker with the dryer, dryer worked fine, nothing was back fed either. Bought a new 30 amp breaker for the dryer and installed it on Saturday. Also on Saturday we were given a dryer, about 4 years old, same as ours, so i hooked it up and saved ours for a spare, which I deemed still good since it seemed the breaker was the issue. New Dryer worked fine from saturday until today. Now it won't turn on, though it didn't cut out mid load yesterday either. The breaker did not trip. I repeat, no tripped breaker. I just checked the voltage at the wall and it seems to have that same problem where one side of the receptacle gets a reading of 120, and the other a reading of about 5. The problem must be bigger than the breaker. I am not an electrician, I am a welder. I have gone as far as I could on my own. Thank you.
Came across this gem tonight:
I know most people have become or are aware of the importance of the use of audio grade AC wall outlets. What most people do not know is the importance of using the right AC wall outlet plate also. Most AC wall oulet plates are metal or plastic. Replace all of your AC wall outlet plates in your audio and your home theater systems with wooden AC wall outlet plates. If you purchase finished wooden plates, lightly sand them with "rough" sandpaper until the sound is to your liking -- the sound will go from "thick" to "more harmonically accurate" the more you sand it. Sand lightly at first, take a listen and if the sound is too "thick" to your liking, sand some more until you get it to your liking. The best thing is to start out with unfinished wooden plates, sand them lightly with medium sandpaper and then apply a very thin, light coat of "clear coat". Allow the plate to dry and cure for 24 hours and repeat this procedure. If done correctly, you will notice that your video picture will sharpen, the colors will blossom and the sound will be more harmonically accurate with better resolution and refinement. http://archive.avsforum.com/avs-vb/showthread.php?threadid=36999&highlight=sanding
I've been the owner of a 1930s era Colonial Revival that our first major project is to rewire the house. We have a 100A main box that is maxed out, a combination of cloth 2-wire, flex, and some cracking Romex along with some downright dangerous open wiring in the basement, tapped wiring in the kitchen and study, some gangboxes that were wallpapered over in the bedrooms that we assume were wall lights (we have similar wall lights in the bathrooms), inadequate outlets in most rooms, no GFI. Etc. Etc. In addition the bathrooms are small and lack wall switches or outlets (they have two pull-cord wall lamps, with one lamp with a outlet.
Here is a floor plan with electrical represented on the ground and second floor. Still working on mapping the basement and the attic (which has a 3/4 converted finished "bonus" room. My Father-In-Law who is a licensed electrician has promised to gracefully donate a couple months of his time to rewire everything. Also a bonus in this is the majority of outlets are mounted on the baseboard trim and not in the plaster. My plans are to go with a single 200A main, likely double the amount of outlets in each room, GFI where needed. While I know some basics, I want to familiarize myself a bit more on what is the best approach to rewire. For instance should I look at running conduit in just one spot of the house, or should I run two on each end of the house? I plan to do some major remodeling of some rooms in the future, especially the kitchen and bath so what are the best ways to ensure I have an easier time with these remodels?
Hey everyone - question about home wiring that was done when the house was built about 20 years ago (which putting it delicately...is very shoddy at best). I'd like to think of myself as fairly knowledgeable in basic home wiring...but this one has me baffled and I really hope someone can help.
I am redoing a screened-in porch at the back of our house. There is currently a working outlet, and single-pole switch that turns on an outside bug zapper, and a wire running coming into a second switch...then leading into nothing in the ceiling (presumably for a future ceiling fan / light install that was never completed). I gutted the entire porch and using one of those audible voltage testers, discovered the wire than ran into the second switch / ceiling box did NOT work. Not thinking much about it, I tried figuring out how the first switch (to that outdoor bug zapper) was wired. Most of the wiring for that switch and the outlet I mentioned is behind the plywood sheathing of the house...so it's near impossible to figure out where it goes. Initially it LOOKED like the power from the circuit panel came into the outlet first...and then went out to the bug zapper switch. (Why did I think this? The outlet had a B/W wire coming into it...and another B/W going out back into the wall somewhere. Tracing that wire along the basement foundation best I could...it looked like it went right into the bug zapper switch). So wanting to completely eliminate the bug zapper switch, I disconnected all of the wires that were connected to the outlet to figure out which set was leading to it. Here's where I got confused. When I did this and re-tested voltage at the outlet, one set of wires was live...and the other set was dead. And that makes perfect sense. Yet the bug zapper switch STILL worked. OK - so my conclusion: the power for this bug zapper switch isn't coming from the outlet. No problem. But just because I was near it, I decided to also check that 2nd switch / ceiling wire combo...and what do you know - it was LIVE! I got super excited it was working but then super baffled because I didn't do anything to that ceiling wire at all. In fact - all I did was DISconnect 2 sets of wires at a nearby outlet. Confused but happy, I was ready to pack it in for the evening and re-connected the incoming / outgoing wires back to the power outlet. Flipped the circuit breaker on. No issues. BUT - now all of a sudden the 2nd switch / ceiling wire that magically started working was NO longer working - just like it hadn't been since I started this whole process. Logic is telling me it's obviously got something to do with the outlet wiring...since that's the only thing I messed with. But why would the ceiling wire all of a sudden become LIVE when the wires going into the outlet were all disconnected? It's certainly a first for me. Can anyone help me figure this mystery out? Thanks gang!
Okay, I am fairly new to wiring but its not the wiring I am wondering about. It is running the wires. I have 2 rooms in my house, 2 story and an attic, on the main floor that doesn't have any overhead lighting, only can use floor or table lamps right now. The ceilings are about 10 feet tall. There are outlets in the room so I do have power I can tap into for the lighting, but how do I go about running the wires up into the ceiling? I do know I have to cut the hole for the lighting but will i have to put cut flaps in the drywall where ever there is a brace to drill holes to run the wires. I am going to go from the middle of the ceiling straight back to the wall and then down to the switch that I will put in and then down to the outlet to tap into for the power. I am just trying to do this the easiest way to minimize any drywall repair that will be needed. Any help or suggestions from anyone is greatly appreciated and if you have questions please ask and I willl try to answer them.
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