Is Connecting Red Wire To Black Wire Dangerous?
Hello,
I took a shot at installing a ceiling fan for the first time and I would like to get advice if I did the wiring correctly. There were Black, Copper, Red, and White Wires coming from the ceiling. I read the instructions and connected the wires as stated on the manual. I was left with the Red wire. I called a friend up and he told me to connect the Red wires from ceiling to the Black Connections from Ceiling and Fan. The fan works but something is irking me inside thats telling me this is not safe. Could anyone with any know how in this subject guide me in the right direction? Similar Tutorials
How to Lay Sod - The Right Way!
- Make sure the green side faces up! And, there are a few more steps if you want to ensure a nice looking lawn. Prepa ...
The Difference Between Volts, Amps, and Watts
- This article explains the difference between Volts, Amps, and Watts in an easy-to-understand non-scientific way. T ...
Water is Leaking from the Toilet – What do I do? (How to replace the wax seal for a toilet.)
- If there is water leaking from the toilet, you need to make sure that you know from where the water is leaking. Che ... Similar Topics From Forums
Hidy!
Hoping someone can guide me in the right direction. I have essentially no experience with electrical anything unless its a computer, and I am remodeling my Mother's guest room. We picked a pendant light to replace the old flushmount lighting. I've got the old one removed (and yes I have the power off in the room ), and I cannot figure out how to do this based on the instructions given (or on any video I have watched). There are two copper "wires" coming down from the ceiling. They are both wrapped in black insulation, and they form like a little hoop/circle on the end. The fixture has a copper wire, not insulated, and like a double copper wire insulated with brownish black coating. Sorry...I don't know technical terms here, but I would be happy to post pics. I just need help installing this thing. I've done flooring and plumbing and everything else you can imagine a chcik might figure out how to do, but I am stumped here. Please help me do this! It doesn't seem like it should be this difficult!
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 have a fluorescent light I'd like to remove and add a tracklight.
Luckily it's in the basement with an unfinished ceiling. here's the circuit map as is now: 1. breaker to fluorescent light.... connections inside 2. fluorescent light to switch at the top of the stairs 3. switch to the light in the stairwell. This terminates the circuit. The wiring is all 14/2 I'd like to replace the the fluorescent light with a track light, but I'm not sure how to continue the circuit to the switch in the stairwell. Is it safe to... 1. bring the cable from the breaker to the junction box. 2. connect the black wire with the black wire on the light AND the black wire leaving the box to the switch in the stairwell using a marette. 3. connect the white wire with the white wire on the light AND the white wire leaving the box to the switch in the stairwell using a marette 4. connecting a 6 inch bare 14 gauge wire to the box ground screw, then using a marette, connecting it with the ground wire from the cable entering the box as well as the one leaving and also the ground wire from the light. Will this work and is it safe?
I replaced a ceiling light with a fan/light with a remote. everthing works. their is one light switch and one dimmer switch. The dimmer switch has a red wire and a black wire connected to the black wires coming out of the dimmer switch, plus a green wire hooked to the metal portion of the dimmer. My question is: Do I have to remove the dimmer switch, if so, can I disconnect the red and black and hook them together? If I have to replace the dimmer with a regular switch, what kind of switch do I get?
Thank you
Greetings!
I'm hoping for some help, I am replacing an old ceiling fan with a new one that has a remote control function. I discovered in the box on the ceiling there were three wires coming in and capped off with a wire nut. The previous fan was wired to two other white wires coming in, and the fan is on a switch. The problem is when I wire the new fan the same way the old one was, it does not have power. When I wire it to the three capped off wires instead, no power either. When I wire all of them together (gasp!) It shorts out at the breaker. Any ideas on how to wire this thing? 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
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!
Well it's not really an outlet but just a junction box that has black, white and bare copper coming out. I was told by someone before that this would be the end of the line for this circuit since the wires don't go any further from this box. Its located in my attic just below the eve opening for an attic fan. I checked the black and white wires a few years ago and measured 115 vac so I installed the attic fan and it was fine until this year. No fan operation so I check for power and I'm measuring about 3 vac across the white and black wires now. I disconnected the attic fan and measured the same 3 vac. Test fan on another power sourch and it works. Everything else on the circuit seems to be working. Any ideas what might be happening here. The attic fan really helps a lot and I'd like to get it working again. If I need to provide more information please ask and I'll do my best. Thanks for any help.
We had a pipe disconnect above the downstairs bathroom and the ceiling just about came down, so I decided since it was a hedious looking space, that it was a sign from the gods: Reno time!
Im now at the wiring stage. Originally there was a junction box with a light fixture out one side and a single pole switch(no ground screw...grnd wire attached to the box)on the other. Typical set up: white from switch marked "hot" or "black" at both ends, and spliced with the incoming power's black wire. Then remaining blacks are spliced together as are the remaining whites... grounded accordingly. What Im trying to do now is add a GFCI receptical to the mix. But Im having some trouble figuring it all out. NOTE: light fixture is not installed yet, just the wire for it with the ends capped off with a wire nut on each of the wires (Wht/Black/Grnd) First, whats in the walls: Circuits on a 15 AMP fuse with older (but not the oldest) 12/2 wire with a blue weaved fiber outside cover. Still looks to be in great shape. I've continued using newer, yellow (Lomex or Romex?) 12/2 from homedepot as I've read that you should not mix 14 and 12 together. All that is on the cicuit is 3 pot lights with 65w bulbs, single bulb on the stairway and what ever goes in the bathroom, so from my math, there should be plenty of room left on the circuit. What I've tried so far: A: I spliced the "hot"/"black" white wire from the switch to the incoming power's black, like before. Then I spliced all remaining blacks together with a wire nut, then the same with all remaining whites and then all grounds (did not attach any grnd wire to the Junction box). Result, Nothing. After switching on the power, I tested the GFCI with a voltage tester as well as the switch and got no read. B: Undid everything, re-spliced all like to like: all blck together, all white together..etc. Result: Fuse trips. Im no electrician, which I imagine is blatantly obvious from the above post, but I am following a Homedepot wiring manual, its just that what Im trying to do is not really addressed in the book... at least not directly. So I've been trying to figure it out by reading every single page, but Im still at a loss. I've attached a very basic diagram of what is there right now. Any advice would be most appreciated. Thanks in advance, John |