Hi,
I'm trying to move a single duplex outlet about 6" down a wall in my apartment's kitchen (and make it a double duplex in the process). Everything is wired, but my voltage detector goes off about 3 inches away from the newly installed box itself, indicating that it might be hot (?). Some details...
What was there before: a single old work box with power coming from the ceiling via 12/2 armored cable. This is on a 15 amp circuit.
What I did: installed new 2-gang old work metal box on stud in the new spot; pigtailed wires in existing box with 14-gauge wire, covered box, and ran wires down wall; pigtailed two wire segments to the black wire and two to the white wire coming into the new box and screwed ground to back of box and pigtailed 2 green wires to that; wired both outlets (blk to brass; white to silver; green to green). Everything has wirenuts and electrical tape. (I did test the black wire coming INTO the original box to make sure it wasn't wired backwards.)
My main question: what should be my process for identifying what's causing the short? Is there a troubleshooting method?
Also, how do I tell if there's REALLY a short? A while ago there must have been some stray current in our steel desk--though you couldn't tell by touching it. If my wife touched the desk with her hand, I could touch the detector to her head and the thing would go off. A great party trick, but I wonder if the detector might just be really sensitive. For this, maybe it's just picking up the bundle of black wires folded in the back of the box (?).
Some other questions that might have been helpful 48 hours ago:
-A hardware store employee steered me away from romex or armored cable to run the 6" between the boxes, insisting it's fine to run 14 gauge black/white wires inside some flexible plastic tubing--the flimsy kind usually used to bundle/organize wires. In retrospect this seems unwise (and potentially illegal). Any thoughts?
-The 2-gang box I bought has a nailer plate to go onto a stud (again at the advice of the hardware store guy), but our plaster walls have an inch or more of material before you get to open space. With the box nailed to the stud, it's pretty far back from where the outlets need to sit. Should I have just gotten a regular box (with no nailer) and plastered it in closer to the wall surface (maybe with a screw going through the inside of the box into the edge of the wall material)?
-Whoever installed some of the outlets in our house wrapped electrical tape around the backs of the outlets to cover up the screws/contacts. Is this standard/recommended practice?
Sorry for the long post (my first here!) and, of course, for any and all advice.
Sam
I'm trying to move a single duplex outlet about 6" down a wall in my apartment's kitchen (and make it a double duplex in the process). Everything is wired, but my voltage detector goes off about 3 inches away from the newly installed box itself, indicating that it might be hot (?). Some details...
What was there before: a single old work box with power coming from the ceiling via 12/2 armored cable. This is on a 15 amp circuit.
What I did: installed new 2-gang old work metal box on stud in the new spot; pigtailed wires in existing box with 14-gauge wire, covered box, and ran wires down wall; pigtailed two wire segments to the black wire and two to the white wire coming into the new box and screwed ground to back of box and pigtailed 2 green wires to that; wired both outlets (blk to brass; white to silver; green to green). Everything has wirenuts and electrical tape. (I did test the black wire coming INTO the original box to make sure it wasn't wired backwards.)
My main question: what should be my process for identifying what's causing the short? Is there a troubleshooting method?
Also, how do I tell if there's REALLY a short? A while ago there must have been some stray current in our steel desk--though you couldn't tell by touching it. If my wife touched the desk with her hand, I could touch the detector to her head and the thing would go off. A great party trick, but I wonder if the detector might just be really sensitive. For this, maybe it's just picking up the bundle of black wires folded in the back of the box (?).
Some other questions that might have been helpful 48 hours ago:
-A hardware store employee steered me away from romex or armored cable to run the 6" between the boxes, insisting it's fine to run 14 gauge black/white wires inside some flexible plastic tubing--the flimsy kind usually used to bundle/organize wires. In retrospect this seems unwise (and potentially illegal). Any thoughts?
-The 2-gang box I bought has a nailer plate to go onto a stud (again at the advice of the hardware store guy), but our plaster walls have an inch or more of material before you get to open space. With the box nailed to the stud, it's pretty far back from where the outlets need to sit. Should I have just gotten a regular box (with no nailer) and plastered it in closer to the wall surface (maybe with a screw going through the inside of the box into the edge of the wall material)?
-Whoever installed some of the outlets in our house wrapped electrical tape around the backs of the outlets to cover up the screws/contacts. Is this standard/recommended practice?
Sorry for the long post (my first here!) and, of course, for any and all advice.
Sam
Comment