Good morning......
It's been awhile since I've visited the site. Actually, I've taken some time off from remodeling since I finished the nursery. That was a major job, but now our baby is 1 & it's time to move onto the next room. I had started on the dining room initially, but we found out we were pregnant & remodeled the nursery instead. Now it's back to the dining room!
So far I've installed a tray ceiling & refinished the old beat-up bead-baord ceiling. Just tore out all the old sheetrock. Although it wasn't absolutely necessary, I wanted to do it to install new insulation and inspect the wiring. The dining room is actually right across the hallway from the nursery that I have already finished. Now when I worked on the nursery, I noticed that the light was on the same circuit as the dining room light. I figured I would just leave it that way, as our home is 2 stories, and it would be a pain to put the nursery light on the circuit with it's own receptacles.
The fella who owned the house before us dropped the hallway ceiling from 12' to 8' so he could use the extra space for storage & as a cable tray for the new wiring he ran upstairs......very shoddy indeed.
What I want to do is while I'm redoing the dining room, I want to also raise the ceiling in the hallway to 10'.....allowing for the arched casing I'm gonna install from dining room to hall.
As I'm thinking about doing this, I think it would be the perfect opportunity to try to straighten out some of the confusing wiring in the house.
OK......
I have one 20 amp breaker that is powering the following...
1. hall light
2. dining room light
3. master bedroom light
4. nursery light
5. living room light
6. guest bedroom light
7. light above stairs
It seems odd to me that all of these are on the same circuit. Is that the way people wire houses? Is that too much of a load for a 20 amp circuit?
Ideally, I'd like to have the dining room light on the sam circuit as its receptacles.
Someone with a little knowledge please shed some light.
Thank you so much!
It's been awhile since I've visited the site. Actually, I've taken some time off from remodeling since I finished the nursery. That was a major job, but now our baby is 1 & it's time to move onto the next room. I had started on the dining room initially, but we found out we were pregnant & remodeled the nursery instead. Now it's back to the dining room!
So far I've installed a tray ceiling & refinished the old beat-up bead-baord ceiling. Just tore out all the old sheetrock. Although it wasn't absolutely necessary, I wanted to do it to install new insulation and inspect the wiring. The dining room is actually right across the hallway from the nursery that I have already finished. Now when I worked on the nursery, I noticed that the light was on the same circuit as the dining room light. I figured I would just leave it that way, as our home is 2 stories, and it would be a pain to put the nursery light on the circuit with it's own receptacles.
The fella who owned the house before us dropped the hallway ceiling from 12' to 8' so he could use the extra space for storage & as a cable tray for the new wiring he ran upstairs......very shoddy indeed.
What I want to do is while I'm redoing the dining room, I want to also raise the ceiling in the hallway to 10'.....allowing for the arched casing I'm gonna install from dining room to hall.
As I'm thinking about doing this, I think it would be the perfect opportunity to try to straighten out some of the confusing wiring in the house.
OK......
I have one 20 amp breaker that is powering the following...
1. hall light
2. dining room light
3. master bedroom light
4. nursery light
5. living room light
6. guest bedroom light
7. light above stairs
It seems odd to me that all of these are on the same circuit. Is that the way people wire houses? Is that too much of a load for a 20 amp circuit?
Ideally, I'd like to have the dining room light on the sam circuit as its receptacles.
Someone with a little knowledge please shed some light.
Thank you so much!
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