I don't like the sounds of that one at all.  I agree 14 gauge is code in this 
country for lighting, but 12 is the acceptable for most outlet power.

Beyond that, you don't want to be mixing colors in the middle of a run.  

I know this was copied off of a web site, but it sounds like they might be the 
ones that also published those books that were recalled.


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Ray Boyce 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Friday, February 05, 2010 2:56 PM
  Subject: RE: [BlindHandyMan] Wiring a switch.


    
  Hi Dan

  Step One 

  (Refer to Figure 1.) Connect the ground (bare wire) wire to the device box
  and cut it off approximately one inch past the ground screw. 

  Connect the black wire to one screw and the white wire (hot) to the other
  screw on the switch.

  Figure 1.

  Note: This is the only time that you want to use a white wire as the "hot"
  conductor. This is done so you are left with a black and a white wire at the
  light instead of two whites to hook up to your light.

  Step Two

  (Refer to Figure 2.) Usually you will have a 2 conductor #14
  <http://www.electrical-online.com/Lightsandswitches.htm> cable coming from
  the light box to the switch box. Conductor is a fancy word for wire and #14
  is the size of wire you will use throughout 95% of your house.

  Figure 2.

  At the light box (octagon box) connect the black wire from the switch to the
  black wire of the light. Also connect the white wire from the switch to the
  black conductor coming from the breaker. 

  Found here

  http://www.electrical-online.com/Lightsandswitches.htm

  From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
  On Behalf Of Dan Rossi
  Sent: Saturday, 6 February 2010 6:19 AM
  To: Blind Handyman List
  Subject: [BlindHandyMan] Wiring a switch.

  Not that I have any immediate plans of rewiring, but this question popped 
  in my head. I think I've seen a comment about this here before.

  If you are wiring a switch to a light fixture, do you:

  #1: Run a set of wires from the power source to the switch, and a set of 
  wires from the switch to the light fixture. In this case, connecting both 
  blacks to the switch terminals, and tieing the two whites together? Do 
  you just stuff the white splice in the box with the switch?

  #2: Run a set of wires from the power source to the light fixture, and a 
  set of wires from the switch to the light fixture. In this case, The 
  white from the power would connect to the white on the light, and the two 
  switch wires would be connected between the black power, and black light 
  wires. It technically wouldn't matter which orientation you connected the 
  switch wires, but is there a standard? I mean, black power, to black 
  switch, then white switch to black fixture.

  #3: I assume this one is definitely wrong, but similar to #2. Run power 
  directly to the light fixture, then just interrupt the black wire at some 
  point with the switch wires.

  I believe choice #1 is the correct option, but is choice #2 against code?

  Choice #3 seems to be the most efficient use of wire, no parallel runs of 
  wire, but would make it a pain in the ass to ever trace an issue since you 
  wouldn't necessarily know where the switch spliced into the power line.

  Just a thought for the day.

  -- 
  Blue skies.
  Dan Rossi
  Carnegie Mellon University.
  E-Mail: [email protected] <mailto:dr25%40andrew.cmu.edu> 
  Tel: (412) 268-9081

  [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



  

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