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[email protected] June 24th 06 12:21 AM

What to do with unused electrical wiring
 
Hopefully there's a quick and easy answer to my question that I can't
find on the web. I'd like to remove a wall switch controlling a light
in my house (it's a 3-way switch and I decided I don't need this end of
it). My question is what I need to do with the wiring to the switch. It
will still be live because the circuit will still be active. Do I need
to pull it all the out from the electrical breaker box? Or can I just
tape it up, maybe put a plastic wire nut on it and leave it inside the
wall? I have very basic electrical skills (can wire lights, outlets,
etc.) so let me know if this is beyond my expertise. Thanks in advance
for the help.

Dave


autonut843 June 24th 06 01:07 AM

What to do with unused electrical wiring
 
Yes, the only thing I'd add though is that as you are selecting the two
wires to wire-nut together, have the remaining switch in what you want
to be the ON position. Otherwise, Murphy's law will kick in and you
will wire nut it so you have to flip the switch DOWN to turn the light
ON and it will drive your wife nuts until you fix that.


Edwin Pawlowski June 24th 06 01:09 AM

What to do with unused electrical wiring
 

wrote in message
oups.com...
Hopefully there's a quick and easy answer to my question that I can't
find on the web. I'd like to remove a wall switch controlling a light
in my house (it's a 3-way switch and I decided I don't need this end of
it). My question is what I need to do with the wiring to the switch. It
will still be live because the circuit will still be active. Do I need
to pull it all the out from the electrical breaker box? Or can I just
tape it up, maybe put a plastic wire nut on it and leave it inside the
wall? I have very basic electrical skills (can wire lights, outlets,
etc.) so let me know if this is beyond my expertise. Thanks in advance
for the help.


Best thing to do is leave it alone in case you change your mind or sell the
house and the next owner wants it. I can't think of a singe reason to take
it out even if not used. If your wife has a headache, would you cut your
testicles off because they are not needed right now?



CJT June 24th 06 01:18 AM

What to do with unused electrical wiring
 
Edwin Pawlowski wrote:

snip

If your wife has a headache, would you cut your
testicles off because they are not needed right now?


I hear that's the real reason we invaded Iraq.

--
The e-mail address in our reply-to line is reversed in an attempt to
minimize spam. Our true address is of the form .

HeyBub June 24th 06 03:39 AM

What to do with unused electrical wiring
 
CJT wrote:
Edwin Pawlowski wrote:

snip

If your wife has a headache, would you cut your
testicles off because they are not needed right now?


I hear that's the real reason we invaded Iraq.


We don't do things like that. We did cause Sadaam to lose his job, exiled
his family, confiscated his money, evicted him from his homes, killed his
children, and clapped him in a cell. De-testicling him would be excessive.



[email protected] June 24th 06 04:40 AM

What to do with unused electrical wiring
 
be aware that codes may require a 3 way switch at that location, like
both top and bottom of stairs.

why remove the switch? it accomplishes nothing but creates a later
problem at home sale time


Steve Barker LT June 24th 06 05:08 AM

What to do with unused electrical wiring
 
then you'd only have to turn the switch over.

--
Steve Barker


"autonut843" wrote in message
oups.com...
Yes, the only thing I'd add though is that as you are selecting the two
wires to wire-nut together, have the remaining switch in what you want
to be the ON position. Otherwise, Murphy's law will kick in and you
will wire nut it so you have to flip the switch DOWN to turn the light
ON and it will drive your wife nuts until you fix that.




~^Johnny^~ June 24th 06 08:13 AM

What to do with unused electrical wiring
 
On 23 Jun 2006 17:07:05 -0700, "autonut843"
wrote:

Yes, the only thing I'd add though is that as you are selecting the two
wires to wire-nut together, have the remaining switch in what you want
to be the ON position. Otherwise, Murphy's law will kick in and you
will wire nut it so you have to flip the switch DOWN to turn the light
ON and it will drive your wife nuts until you fix that.


Maybe she's Italian. :-)

--
-john
wide-open at throttle dot info

~^Johnny^~ June 24th 06 08:14 AM

What to do with unused electrical wiring
 
On Sat, 24 Jun 2006 00:18:49 GMT, CJT wrote:

Edwin Pawlowski wrote:

snip

If your wife has a headache, would you cut your
testicles off because they are not needed right now?


I hear that's the real reason we invaded Iraq.


Oil half, two agree.

--
-john
wide-open at throttle dot info

~^Johnny^~ June 24th 06 08:18 AM

What to do with unused electrical wiring
 
On 23 Jun 2006 20:40:57 -0700, "
wrote:

why remove the switch?


There are several good reasons.

To deny control access in an area, for safety reasons, is one.

--
-john
wide-open at throttle dot info

Stormin Mormon June 24th 06 01:08 PM

What to do with unused electrical wiring
 
Yeah, but I wouldn't wire nut the two testicles together. That could
hurt. Just cut em off.

--

Christopher A. Young
You can't shout down a troll.
You have to starve them.
..

"Edwin Pawlowski" wrote in message
.net...


Best thing to do is leave it alone in case you change your mind or
sell the
house and the next owner wants it. I can't think of a singe reason to
take
it out even if not used. If your wife has a headache, would you cut
your
testicles off because they are not needed right now?




[email protected] June 24th 06 02:07 PM

What to do with unused electrical wiring
 

~^Johnny^~ wrote:
On 23 Jun 2006 20:40:57 -0700, "
wrote:

why remove the switch?


There are several good reasons.

To deny control access in an area, for safety reasons, is one.

--
-john
wide-open at throttle dot info


if the area has windows and its daylight it doesnt matter.

if its a public space and someone enters the area and falls you will be
found liable might cost you tons of bucks.

a locked door, a alarm , or other efforts may be a better choice


mm June 24th 06 08:59 PM

What to do with unused electrical wiring
 
On 23 Jun 2006 17:07:05 -0700, "autonut843"
wrote:

Yes, the only thing I'd add though is that as you are selecting the two
wires to wire-nut together, have the remaining switch in what you want
to be the ON position. Otherwise, Murphy's law will kick in and you
will wire nut it so you have to flip the switch DOWN to turn the light
ON and it will drive your wife nuts until you fix that.


Not counting 3-way switches, the major cause of having to put the
switch down to light the room is buying NO and FO switches in the
first place. Be sure to look at your switches before you buy them.

Thomas D. Horne, FF EMT June 26th 06 06:07 PM

What to do with unused electrical wiring
 
wrote:
~^Johnny^~ wrote:
On 23 Jun 2006 20:40:57 -0700, "
wrote:

why remove the switch?

There are several good reasons.

To deny control access in an area, for safety reasons, is one.

--
-john
wide-open at throttle dot info


if the area has windows and its daylight it doesnt matter.

if its a public space and someone enters the area and falls you will be
found liable might cost you tons of bucks.

a locked door, a alarm , or other efforts may be a better choice


I believe you are misreading the post you are replying to. By the
phrase "To deny control access in an area" I suspect the OP means to
deny access to the control of the lighting in that area. This is
usually done to prevent unauthorized shut down of the lighting in a
public space. As an example the US NEC forbids the use of multi point
switching on required Emergency Lighting Circuits. So when a building
that has previously used individual battery pack emergency lights is
converted to centralized emergency power; such as an inverter array or
generator; there are often dozens of three way and four way; or two way
and intermediate; switches to be removed.
--
Tom Horne

Well we aren't no thin blue heroes and yet we aren't no blackguards to.
We're just working men and woman most remarkable like you.


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