I am an above average handyman / do-it-yourselfer. I have run new circuits, and done a lot of basic wiring. I encountered something yesterday that I don't understand and have not seen before. I was re-wiring my ceiling fan with a 3 wire plus ground feed in place of the existing 2 wire plus ground in order to seperate the light and the fan to seperate wall switches. There were 3 sets of 2 wire with ground at the existing switch. The feed came into the bottom of the switch to a screw terminal. The feed to the ceiling fan came out the top of the switch. There was another feed coming out the bottom of the switch. The 3 commons were tied together in the box, as well as 3 the ground wires. Everything was going along fine. I had the breaker shut off and had checked the supply line and it was off. As I was disconnecting the wires from the switch and unhooking the common wires, I got shocked. I tested the lines and found that one of the commons had 46 volts on it. I determined this common went with the black wire that came out of the bottom of the switch. I went to the attic and found that this feed went to a wall switch that controls the hallway light fixtures. It is a setup with 2 fixtures that are controlled in a three way configuration from either end of the hallway. I called a friend who is a maintenance supervisor and he told me that this happens if you have a loose connection somewhere or you may have a slight short. I checked all connections in the breaker box, but the problem still existed. I pulled my new cable and hooked up the fan. With the breaker still off, as I tied the commons together, I got a spark from the offending common and the hallway light came on. When we flipped the hallway switch, the light went off and the spark went away.
Can anyone explain what may be going on here and how I should go about troublkeshooting the problem?
Can anyone explain what may be going on here and how I should go about troublkeshooting the problem?
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