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/Bob August 2nd 06 01:22 PM

No boxes behind electrical outlets
 
We've discovered that part of our 30+ year old house has no boxes
behind the electrical outlets. The switches and outlets are just held
in position by the stiffness of the wires. Is there a straightforward
way to add boxes "after the fact" without tearing out wallboard?
Thanks for your suggestions.

/Bob


Stubby August 2nd 06 01:37 PM

No boxes behind electrical outlets
 


/Bob wrote:
We've discovered that part of our 30+ year old house has no boxes
behind the electrical outlets. The switches and outlets are just held
in position by the stiffness of the wires. Is there a straightforward
way to add boxes "after the fact" without tearing out wallboard?


Sure. Home Depot has a selection of blue boxes that have ears that turn
out behind the wall when you tighten the screws.

herlihyboy August 2nd 06 01:42 PM

No boxes behind electrical outlets
 

Stubby wrote:
/Bob wrote:
We've discovered that part of our 30+ year old house has no boxes
behind the electrical outlets. The switches and outlets are just held
in position by the stiffness of the wires. Is there a straightforward
way to add boxes "after the fact" without tearing out wallboard?



We had plaster walls and added many new outlets. I used metal boxes
with plaster ears on them [top and bottom]. I just screwed them
through the lathe and they held just fine.


Speedy Jim August 2nd 06 02:00 PM

No boxes behind electrical outlets
 
/Bob wrote:
We've discovered that part of our 30+ year old house has no boxes
behind the electrical outlets. The switches and outlets are just held
in position by the stiffness of the wires. Is there a straightforward
way to add boxes "after the fact" without tearing out wallboard?
Thanks for your suggestions.

/Bob


Yes, but the other question you should be asking is:
"What *else* did they do??"

Color me suspicious...

Jim

DT August 2nd 06 02:39 PM

No boxes behind electrical outlets
 
In article .com,
says...

We've discovered that part of our 30+ year old house has no boxes
behind the electrical outlets. The switches and outlets are just held
in position by the stiffness of the wires. Is there a straightforward
way to add boxes "after the fact" without tearing out wallboard?
Thanks for your suggestions.


Sure, they are available at any home center. Just look for boxes labelled "old
work" as opposed to "new work". Since the wires are no doubt pretty short, you
will need to completely remove the springy 'clamps' on the plastic boxes. Just
bend them out and twist them off so you can easily shove the wires through as
the box goes into the hole in the drywall.

--
Dennis


Mikey August 2nd 06 03:41 PM

No boxes behind electrical outlets
 


Speedy Jim wrote:

/Bob wrote:
We've discovered that part of our 30+ year old house has no boxes
behind the electrical outlets. The switches and outlets are just held
in position by the stiffness of the wires. Is there a straightforward
way to add boxes "after the fact" without tearing out wallboard?
Thanks for your suggestions.

/Bob


Yes, but the other question you should be asking is:
"What *else* did they do??"

Color me suspicious...

Jim


Or "What else did they NOT do?"


FireBrick August 2nd 06 05:41 PM

No boxes behind electrical outlets
 
Jim hit the nail.
A 30 year old house is NOT old. Codes when that house were built were good.
You didn't say where this house is, city or rural.

"Speedy Jim" wrote in message
. ..
/Bob wrote:
We've discovered that part of our 30+ year old house has no boxes
behind the electrical outlets. The switches and outlets are just held
in position by the stiffness of the wires. Is there a straightforward
way to add boxes "after the fact" without tearing out wallboard?
Thanks for your suggestions.

/Bob


Yes, but the other question you should be asking is:
"What *else* did they do??"

Color me suspicious...

Jim




Nick Danger August 2nd 06 07:07 PM

No boxes behind electrical outlets
 

"/Bob" wrote in message
oups.com...
We've discovered that part of our 30+ year old house has no boxes
behind the electrical outlets. The switches and outlets are just held
in position by the stiffness of the wires. Is there a straightforward
way to add boxes "after the fact" without tearing out wallboard?
Thanks for your suggestions.


I'm not sure how building inspectors are where you live, but where I live
(in Westchester County, NY), they do everything by the book. Around here,
something like this would be evidence of unlicensed electrical work -
possibly done by a previous owner with no electrical training. Even if you
are not worried about the effects of improperly done electrical work (fire,
shock), you still need to be worried about what will happen when you try to
sell the house. Banks are constantly getting more and more picky. Whereas a
few years ago, a bank might only have been concerned about the buyer's
credit rating and whether the house was in a flood zone, they now
investigate whether there is any evidence of work done without a permit -
even decades ago. If they see something like this, they'll refuse to approve
a mortgage until everything is approved by the building/electrical
inspector. The inspector is likely to tell you to remove all the sheetrock
in suspect areas so he/she can do a full inspection. Sometimes, if it looks
like a reasonably professional job, you might be able to get a local
electrician to certify it and then the building inspector will approve. But
if there are no boxes, this is a sign that there was work done by someone
who was unqualified. In addition to the headaches you might have when you
try to sell the house, you might also run into problems if you decide to
have some renovations done (with proper permits) and in the course of that
work, this old work is discovered.

I would recommend trying to find an electrician who is a friend (or friend
of a friend, etc.) or someone reasonably qualified with electrical work,
have them take a look at it in an unofficial capacity, and see what they
have to say about it. No one here has seen the work, nor do they know how
code enforcement is done in your town - and you don't really know anything
about their qualifications.



z August 2nd 06 07:10 PM

No boxes behind electrical outlets
 

Speedy Jim wrote:
/Bob wrote:
We've discovered that part of our 30+ year old house has no boxes
behind the electrical outlets. The switches and outlets are just held
in position by the stiffness of the wires. Is there a straightforward
way to add boxes "after the fact" without tearing out wallboard?
Thanks for your suggestions.

/Bob


Yes, but the other question you should be asking is:
"What *else* did they do??"

Color me suspicious...

Jim


I've seen inexpert work before, but how inexperienced do you have to be
not to realize that such things as boxes exist?


[email protected] August 2nd 06 08:14 PM

No boxes behind electrical outlets
 
Good friends had a house fire with little insurance. Fire was caused by
cat knocking over a lamp:(

Anyhow during Demo found previous owner was HORRIBLE electrician!

Including 2 lengths of romex tied together in a knot with no box
hanging inside a wall:(

They ended up rewiring the entire home........

Bad work with ZIP common sense is way too common..........

Lots of other problems the electrical system was a complete waste.


John Grabowski August 2nd 06 09:10 PM

No boxes behind electrical outlets
 

"z" wrote in message
oups.com...

Speedy Jim wrote:
/Bob wrote:
We've discovered that part of our 30+ year old house has no boxes
behind the electrical outlets. The switches and outlets are just held
in position by the stiffness of the wires. Is there a straightforward
way to add boxes "after the fact" without tearing out wallboard?
Thanks for your suggestions.

/Bob


Yes, but the other question you should be asking is:
"What *else* did they do??"

Color me suspicious...

Jim


I've seen inexpert work before, but how inexperienced do you have to be
not to realize that such things as boxes exist?



Many years ago I was called to troubleshoot some outlets in a room that used
to be garage. I removed the wall plate and found that not only was the
outlet not mounted in a box, but it was wired with speaker wire. The whole
room was like that. Of course the owner did not want to pay me to make it
all right.


Tom The Great August 5th 06 03:31 PM

No boxes behind electrical outlets
 
On 2 Aug 2006 05:22:29 -0700, "/Bob" wrote:

We've discovered that part of our 30+ year old house has no boxes
behind the electrical outlets. The switches and outlets are just held
in position by the stiffness of the wires. Is there a straightforward
way to add boxes "after the fact" without tearing out wallboard?
Thanks for your suggestions.

/Bob


imho:

I can't see what you actually have, but from what you asked. You can
get electrical boxes that can be used after finish is installed. They
go by names like: Old-work boxes, remodel boxes, etc.

Some have wings that hold the box against the finished surface. You
will find these in big package stores. Some have internal screwss
that attach to studs, like the "one-box".

Before you start, I would first have you whole how checked by a
qualified electrician. if the previous work was done without boxes,
you might have other underlying problems.

Good luck,

tom @ www.BlankHelp.com



mm August 7th 06 12:58 AM

No boxes behind electrical outlets
 
On Wed, 02 Aug 2006 08:39:54 -0500, (DT)
wrote:

In article .com,
says...

We've discovered that part of our 30+ year old house has no boxes
behind the electrical outlets. The switches and outlets are just held
in position by the stiffness of the wires. Is there a straightforward
way to add boxes "after the fact" without tearing out wallboard?
Thanks for your suggestions.


Sure, they are available at any home center. Just look for boxes labelled "old
work" as opposed to "new work". Since the wires are no doubt pretty short, you
will need to completely remove the springy 'clamps' on the plastic boxes.


DT is talking about the all-pastic clamps that are meant to hold the
electric cable in place where it goes into the box. Not the metal
arms that rotate out and then clamp down as the screws in the box,
where the arms pivot, are tightened.

I only say this because I didn't understand at first.

Just
bend them out and twist them off so you can easily shove the wires through as
the box goes into the hole in the drywall.




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