DIYbanter

DIYbanter (https://www.diybanter.com/)
-   Home Repair (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/)
-   -   Wiring Configuration -- Impossible ? (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/86086-wiring-configuration-impossible.html)

JohnF January 12th 05 07:43 PM

Wiring Configuration -- Impossible ?
 
I have 2 ceiling boxes that are wired as follows: a 2 wire power cable
(feed) enters Box 1 and a 2 wire cable leaves Box 1 to go to Box 2 which
contains another 2 wire that leads to a single pole switch. The light in
Box 2 gets its power from Box 1 and can operate off the switch. Box 1
light is always hot so it operates on a pull chain. Is there any way that
I can use the existing setup so that the one single pole switch operates
both ceiling box lights. Should there have been a 3-wire some place in this
mix? Thanks in advance. John



Matt January 12th 05 07:50 PM

John -

Yep, you need 3 wires between the 2 ceiling boxes; one lead to carry
the hot on to the switch via box 2, one lead to carry the switched hot
back to the light in box 1, and the third is your neutral.

Matt


Matt January 12th 05 08:08 PM

Maybe more detail, if ya need it:

Replace the 2 wire cable running between the 2 lights with 3 conductor
wire.

In Box 1, tie all your grounds together and secure with wire nut.
In Box 1, connect the black (incoming power) to the black wire going
out.
In Box 1, connect the red wire (from the 3 wire cable) to the hot side
of the fixture.
In Box 1, connect the incoming white to the outgoing white. Pigtail
another wire off this connection, and hook to the neutral side of the
fixture.

In Box 2, tie all your grounds together and secure with wire nut.
In Box 2, Connect the black (incoming wire from the 3 wire cable) to
the black wire which runs to the switch.
In Box 2, Connect the white (incoming wire from the 3 wire cable) to
the neutral of the fixture.
In Box 2, Wrap a piece of black electrical tape around the insulation
of the white wire coming from the switch, to act as an indicator that
this is a switched hot, and not a neutral.
In Box 2, Connect the wire you just labeled in the last step to the red
wire going to box 1. Pigtail another wire off of this connection, and
connect to the hot side of the fixture.

Also, if any of the fixtures have a grounded outlet in them, make sure
you run a ground to the green screw on the fixture.


Ross Mac January 12th 05 08:28 PM


"JohnF" wrote in message
...
I have 2 ceiling boxes that are wired as follows: a 2 wire power cable
(feed) enters Box 1 and a 2 wire cable leaves Box 1 to go to Box 2 which
contains another 2 wire that leads to a single pole switch. The light in
Box 2 gets its power from Box 1 and can operate off the switch. Box 1
light is always hot so it operates on a pull chain. Is there any way
that
I can use the existing setup so that the one single pole switch operates
both ceiling box lights. Should there have been a 3-wire some place in
this
mix? Thanks in advance. John


I appears you need a third wire from what I understand here. Disconnect the
black wire from the light fixture on box 1 and run a wire of appropriate
gauge to the cold side of the switch or the hot side of the other light/box
2 (black wire again) which will probably be easier. Time for a trip to the
attic!
You may need the next size up of wire nut. Don't force three wires into a
small one.Be careful because sometimes colors can be incorrect and trip a
breaker. If you want to run a test on which wire is hot and which is
nuetral, connect a meter to the black wire and earth ground (green or bare)
and there should be about 115 volts or so. To test for the neutral connect
your meter to the white wire and the ground and there should be 0 to a few
volts or so. This way you know for sure without tripping or trashing a
circuit breaker....good luck on your project....Ross



JohnF January 12th 05 09:23 PM

Thanks Matt. I may be able to get power into Box 2 without a lot of wall
destruction. If so am I right to think that the existing 2 wire that now
connects Box 1 and Box 2 could become a switch leg and just get hooked up to
the existing switch leg? John


"Matt" wrote in message
oups.com...
John -

Yep, you need 3 wires between the 2 ceiling boxes; one lead to carry
the hot on to the switch via box 2, one lead to carry the switched hot
back to the light in box 1, and the third is your neutral.

Matt




Matt January 12th 05 09:28 PM

Yes, if you can move the power source to box 2, then you are good to go.


Matt January 12th 05 09:29 PM

Also, you might check out www.smarthome.com, you could easily use an
X10 solution that would prevent you from having to do any destruction
at all. Lemme know if you want some help with this....


JohnF January 12th 05 10:04 PM

Thanks for the details and help offer. On another project I have a major
need of a 3-way light in a room where no work can be done without tearing
out 2 walls so this X10 sounds like the deal. Best to all for the input.
John


"Matt" wrote in message
ups.com...
Also, you might check out www.smarthome.com, you could easily use an
X10 solution that would prevent you from having to do any destruction
at all. Lemme know if you want some help with this....




Jeff Wisnia January 13th 05 07:19 PM

JohnF wrote:

I have 2 ceiling boxes that are wired as follows: a 2 wire power cable
(feed) enters Box 1 and a 2 wire cable leaves Box 1 to go to Box 2 which
contains another 2 wire that leads to a single pole switch. The light in
Box 2 gets its power from Box 1 and can operate off the switch. Box 1
light is always hot so it operates on a pull chain. Is there any way that
I can use the existing setup so that the one single pole switch operates
both ceiling box lights. Should there have been a 3-wire some place in this
mix? Thanks in advance. John




Not impossible, just a little arcane, and sort of suitable for a "Car
Talk Puzzler".

But, if you really want to do it without having to run any extra wires,
just go here and buy four 34 volt light bulbs, they come in 25, 50, 75
and 100 watt sizes, you'll need all four to be the same wattage.

http://www.abclights.com/linvola19med.html

Wire everything (the 4 bulbs and the switch) in series, running the hot
supply through the black wires all the way to the switch, and then come
back from the switch through all four bulbs and the white wires to the
neutral. Your choice - two bulbs at each location or three in one and
one in the other.

Good luck finding which bulb needs replacing when one burns out, but
they should last a good while since they'll be running a little
undervoltaged.

So much for the folks who said it couldn't be done. G

Jeff (And if anyone thinks I'm being serious they need help more than I do.)

Jeff

--
Jeffry Wisnia

(W1BSV + Brass Rat '57 EE)

"As long as there are final exams, there will be prayer in public
schools"

Terry January 13th 05 08:51 PM



JohnF wrote:

I have 2 ceiling boxes that are wired as follows: a 2 wire power cable
(feed) enters Box 1 and a 2 wire cable leaves Box 1 to go to Box 2 which
contains another 2 wire that leads to a single pole switch. The light

in
Box 2 gets its power from Box 1 and can operate off the switch. Box 1
light is always hot so it operates on a pull chain. Is there any way

that
I can use the existing setup so that the one single pole switch operates
both ceiling box lights. Should there have been a 3-wire some place in

this
mix? Thanks in advance. John



The basic answer is "Yes there should have been 3 wires between box 2 and
box 1. As you have suggested.
Can you get a three wire cable between the two boxes or even another two
wire plus ground to provide the third wire?
In other words the switch wired from box 2 provides a 'switched live' for
the light there, and, normally, the only way to get that switched live back
to box 1, to control that light as well, is a third wire! There are some
'illegal' and unsafe ways to do it but won't go into that.
Unlike Jeff I was going to suggest (and I don't think this would be code or
understandable to anyone else except the person who will wire it and is also
potentially unsafe. So do not recommend it). Convert the circuit to 230
volt. i.e. make the neutral into the other leg of the 230 volt supply (you
are in North America with a 115-0-230 supply, right?) using a double pole
breaker. Then wire the two 115 volt lamps in series using the switch
connected to box 2 through the first light back through the other light to
the other side of the 230 supply. As said it is NOT safe, it is NOT standard
and someone including a family member or the next owner could get a lethal
115 (or 230) volt shock just replacing a bulb; EVEN WITH THE SWITCH OFF.
Also insurance liability considerations.
So don't do it! But I've seen worse in other countries! And I've seen a set
up, in North America, where someone used the ground wire as neutral; that's
NOT safe don't do it.



Phisherman January 14th 05 03:45 AM

On Wed, 12 Jan 2005 14:43:22 -0500, "JohnF"
wrote:

I have 2 ceiling boxes that are wired as follows: a 2 wire power cable
(feed) enters Box 1 and a 2 wire cable leaves Box 1 to go to Box 2 which
contains another 2 wire that leads to a single pole switch. The light in
Box 2 gets its power from Box 1 and can operate off the switch. Box 1
light is always hot so it operates on a pull chain. Is there any way that
I can use the existing setup so that the one single pole switch operates
both ceiling box lights. Should there have been a 3-wire some place in this
mix? Thanks in advance. John


Run a single wire from box 2 to box 1. This will be the black wire on
the other side of the switch that will replace the existing black wire
connected to the hot side of lamp on box 1.


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 07:42 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter