Here's a very rough drawing of the wiring inside one of the switch boxes in my basement:
Please note that I have left out the earth wires and the return wires are shown as blue instead of white for clarity.
A green "dot" on a switch means the terminal is always hot and a half green dot means that the terminal is only hot when the switch is closed.
You will see there are two terminals, one on each switch, that are never hot regardless of the position of the switch, is this correct for a 3-way switching circuit? This is the way the wiring was when we moved into the house last year. The basement light can be switched from two switches.
Now, for the outside light. The whole reason I am digging around in the switch box in the first place is because our outside lights used to work and then stopped for no apparent reason. The bulbs are fine and I am registering a voltage on the switch terminals but when I click the switch...no light. I can't examine the wiring between the switch and the lights because it is all hidden above the ceiling. I know this isn't a breaker issue because there is power on the switch, is it possible that mice could have chewed through the wire? Another question. If the wiring looks like a 3-way switch then that begs the question, where is the other switch? (We don't know). Is it possible that there could be a problem with the other switch that would stop the outsise lights from working? We have one unidentified switch in our foyer that the previous owner had taped in the on position which we found suspicious. So many unknowns. Might as well mention that all the wiring that I've looked at so far seems to employ back-stabbing which doesn't fill me with much confidence. We're probably going to get an electrician in to have a look a this, and other issues, I just wanted to see if anyone had any ideas that I could try in the meantime.
TIA, Max
Please note that I have left out the earth wires and the return wires are shown as blue instead of white for clarity.
A green "dot" on a switch means the terminal is always hot and a half green dot means that the terminal is only hot when the switch is closed.
You will see there are two terminals, one on each switch, that are never hot regardless of the position of the switch, is this correct for a 3-way switching circuit? This is the way the wiring was when we moved into the house last year. The basement light can be switched from two switches.
Now, for the outside light. The whole reason I am digging around in the switch box in the first place is because our outside lights used to work and then stopped for no apparent reason. The bulbs are fine and I am registering a voltage on the switch terminals but when I click the switch...no light. I can't examine the wiring between the switch and the lights because it is all hidden above the ceiling. I know this isn't a breaker issue because there is power on the switch, is it possible that mice could have chewed through the wire? Another question. If the wiring looks like a 3-way switch then that begs the question, where is the other switch? (We don't know). Is it possible that there could be a problem with the other switch that would stop the outsise lights from working? We have one unidentified switch in our foyer that the previous owner had taped in the on position which we found suspicious. So many unknowns. Might as well mention that all the wiring that I've looked at so far seems to employ back-stabbing which doesn't fill me with much confidence. We're probably going to get an electrician in to have a look a this, and other issues, I just wanted to see if anyone had any ideas that I could try in the meantime.
TIA, Max
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