I have what I know is a simple situation, but I'm one of those people who need visuals. Here's the deal...
We are in the process of replacing a door. The new door is taller than the old one, so I had to move the electrical wire that comes from the main circuit box up, necessitating that I also move the box which contains two light switches on the opposite side of the door upward on the wall by just over a foot. I assume that most people would probably just splice in a length of wire to go the extra distance to the existing box, but we have that lovely aluminum wiring that is illegal to sell, so I can't get a new section of it. In the past, I've used that goop with metal filings in it to wire in another outlet (using a length of copper wire), but that didn't work out very well. Short of rewiring the whole house, moving the box seems the easiest and safest solution.
Here's where my problem comes in...
I drew a schematic of the wiring in the original box before I disconnected everything. Then, while I was in town buying a new box and switches, my dear husband cleaned up, tossing my little drawing in the trash. I didn't find this out until this morning, after the garbage man showed up, right on schedule. I do happen to own a wonderful little book called Wiring Simplified, but darned if I can find it now. I would happily go out to buy another book, but my car is waiting for my husband's next free weekend.
This box contains two switches -- to an outside light just outside the door, and to the ceiling light in the next room -- the kitchen. So I have three wires to contend with. The main wire that powers everything, the wire to the outside light, and another going to the kitchen light. There is also a black jump wire, still attached to a terminal on one of the old switches, but the other end was apparently broken off and I don't know where it should attach (and my drawing would not have helped with this question). I've been trying to find a simple drawing online of what the wiring should look like, but I've drawn a blank.
Each wire contains a white, a black, and a ground wire. The replacement switches (nothing wrong with the old ones -- I wanted white instead of cream) both have ground terminals. The power wire will come in through the bottom of the box, the other two out the top.
Is it possible to explain, in simple terms, what I need to do? Can you perhaps point me to a webpage that has a wiring schematic for my situation? Or should I try to be patient and wait for the replacement copy of Wiring Simplified I just ordered?
We are in the process of replacing a door. The new door is taller than the old one, so I had to move the electrical wire that comes from the main circuit box up, necessitating that I also move the box which contains two light switches on the opposite side of the door upward on the wall by just over a foot. I assume that most people would probably just splice in a length of wire to go the extra distance to the existing box, but we have that lovely aluminum wiring that is illegal to sell, so I can't get a new section of it. In the past, I've used that goop with metal filings in it to wire in another outlet (using a length of copper wire), but that didn't work out very well. Short of rewiring the whole house, moving the box seems the easiest and safest solution.
Here's where my problem comes in...
I drew a schematic of the wiring in the original box before I disconnected everything. Then, while I was in town buying a new box and switches, my dear husband cleaned up, tossing my little drawing in the trash. I didn't find this out until this morning, after the garbage man showed up, right on schedule. I do happen to own a wonderful little book called Wiring Simplified, but darned if I can find it now. I would happily go out to buy another book, but my car is waiting for my husband's next free weekend.
This box contains two switches -- to an outside light just outside the door, and to the ceiling light in the next room -- the kitchen. So I have three wires to contend with. The main wire that powers everything, the wire to the outside light, and another going to the kitchen light. There is also a black jump wire, still attached to a terminal on one of the old switches, but the other end was apparently broken off and I don't know where it should attach (and my drawing would not have helped with this question). I've been trying to find a simple drawing online of what the wiring should look like, but I've drawn a blank.
Each wire contains a white, a black, and a ground wire. The replacement switches (nothing wrong with the old ones -- I wanted white instead of cream) both have ground terminals. The power wire will come in through the bottom of the box, the other two out the top.
Is it possible to explain, in simple terms, what I need to do? Can you perhaps point me to a webpage that has a wiring schematic for my situation? Or should I try to be patient and wait for the replacement copy of Wiring Simplified I just ordered?