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#1
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I just had an electrician over. I realize that he is an electrician
and I am a no-nothing, so I assume that what he told me was accurate, but still.... I have a light switch in a central location on the wall. I want to move that switch further over about a foot closer to the edge of the wall. He told me that he would have to cut out the drywall between the two points (possibly more depending on wire pipe locations), and then we would have to get the drywall repaired and repainted. Suddenly, moving a light switch turns into a $2,000 project (my exaggerated estimate, not his). How come the wires that are currently in the wiring pipe up to the switch cannot just be extended horizontally from point A to point B where the new switch would be? Then, he would just cap the old hole with a cover and cut out a single square for the new switch. I understand that I do not know NEC codes (or anything about electricity for that matter), but is there no easier way to move a light switch one foot? Thanks, Zack |
#2
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On Apr 14, 10:09 am, wrote:
I just had an electrician over. I realize that he is an electrician and I am a no-nothing, so I assume that what he told me was accurate, but still.... I have a light switch in a central location on the wall. I want to move that switch further over about a foot closer to the edge of the wall. He told me that he would have to cut out the drywall between the two points (possibly more depending on wire pipe locations), and then we would have to get the drywall repaired and repainted. Suddenly, moving a light switch turns into a $2,000 project (my exaggerated estimate, not his). How come the wires that are currently in the wiring pipe up to the switch cannot just be extended horizontally from point A to point B where the new switch would be? Then, he would just cap the old hole with a cover and cut out a single square for the new switch. I understand that I do not know NEC codes (or anything about electricity for that matter), but is there no easier way to move a light switch one foot? Thanks, Zack When the drywall cuts are made, make the cuts at a 45 degree angle, that way all one has to do is slap some mud on it and screw it back into place. An alternative, would be to go into the attic, drill a hole in the top plate at the new switch location, splice into the old switch leg and drop it down the wall. Depending on how the original wiring was routed, the wire may reach the new switch location without making a slice. A cable can be ran from the ceiling box to the new switch if you don't want a j-box in the attic. Another possibility, if the box is on the stud that he needs to go through, since the box is not being moved very far, is to remove the existing box, drill a hole in the stud, and then cut-in the new switch box. That should give him 32" to work without removing any drywall. If the existing box is not on a stud, one can still use a paddle bit with a 12" extension on it with minimal damage to the drywall. |
#3
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Zack,
Wire pipe? Are you required to enclose your pipe in conduit? If so then the electrician is proposing the cheapest way to do this. If not then read volts500's post. Either way will involve some drywall work and repainting. $2000 worth? Not likely if you can paint and sand.. Dave M. |
#4
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Any and all junctions must be accessible.
You mention pipe. This is a conduit install? Is this commercial or residential? Are the studs wood or metal? Is it a drop ceiling or gyp? Can you get to it from above? Is it a switch leg or a through the box switch? Is there any other wiring in the box now? You need to get wire from where it is now to the new location. You need to install a new box for the switch. You need a blank plate for the existing switch box. You cannot cover the existing box with anything preventing access to the location. Depending on location, it may be easier and cheaper to run a new switch leg to a new "cut in" box at the new location and abandon the existing. I'm sure your electrician fella knows all the problems and is suggesting the fastest, quickest, easiest solution for your problem. -- ______________________________ Keep the whole world singing . . . . DanG (remove the sevens) wrote in message ps.com... I just had an electrician over. I realize that he is an electrician and I am a no-nothing, so I assume that what he told me was accurate, but still.... I have a light switch in a central location on the wall. I want to move that switch further over about a foot closer to the edge of the wall. He told me that he would have to cut out the drywall between the two points (possibly more depending on wire pipe locations), and then we would have to get the drywall repaired and repainted. Suddenly, moving a light switch turns into a $2,000 project (my exaggerated estimate, not his). How come the wires that are currently in the wiring pipe up to the switch cannot just be extended horizontally from point A to point B where the new switch would be? Then, he would just cap the old hole with a cover and cut out a single square for the new switch. I understand that I do not know NEC codes (or anything about electricity for that matter), but is there no easier way to move a light switch one foot? Thanks, Zack |
#5
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![]() wrote in message How come the wires that are currently in the wiring pipe up to the switch cannot just be extended horizontally from point A to point B where the new switch would be? Then, he would just cap the old hole with a cover and cut out a single square for the new switch. To extend the wires you'd have to make a splice inside of a wiring box. In your case, it would then be covered over with the drywall and hidden. It is against the code to make a splice inside of a wall or any location that is not readily accessible. No hidden joins inside of a wall or ceiling. There will not be enough wire to just pull it over to the new location. |
#6
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#7
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#8
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#9
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On Apr 14, 11:09 am, wrote:
I just had an electrician over. I realize that he is an electrician and I am a no-nothing, so I assume that what he told me was accurate, but still.... I have a light switch in a central location on the wall. I want to move that switch further over about a foot closer to the edge of the wall. He told me that he would have to cut out the drywall between the two points (possibly more depending on wire pipe locations), and then we would have to get the drywall repaired and repainted. Suddenly, moving a light switch turns into a $2,000 project (my exaggerated estimate, not his). How come the wires that are currently in the wiring pipe up to the switch cannot just be extended horizontally from point A to point B where the new switch would be? Then, he would just cap the old hole with a cover and cut out a single square for the new switch. I understand that I do not know NEC codes (or anything about electricity for that matter), but is there no easier way to move a light switch one foot? Thanks, Zack there may be a reason for its location due to how the wall was constructed. is it a bearing wall there might not of been room for it closer to entry of room. check this before cutting up your wall and finding there is no space for the box without cutting into your framing. |
#10
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On 15 Apr 2007 16:11:30 -0700, "sym" wrote:
there may be a reason for its location due to how the wall was constructed. is it a bearing wall there might not of been room for it closer to entry of room. check this before cutting up your wall and finding there is no space for the box without cutting into your framing. Good point. For example, I cut an opening for a receptacle once, and only then noticed that I was back to back with a wall switch. Oops. |
#11
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On Apr 15, 10:01 pm, mm wrote:
On 15 Apr 2007 16:11:30 -0700, "sym" wrote: there may be a reason for its location due to how the wall was constructed. is it a bearing wall there might not of been room for it closer to entry of room. check this before cutting up your wall and finding there is no space for the box without cutting into your framing. Good point. For example, I cut an opening for a receptacle once, and only then noticed that I was back to back with a wall switch. Oops. oops hate it when that happens |
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