Kevin54
MEMBER EMERITUS
I have worked for two days now trying to find why I have three outlets that are dead. Is there something made that can trace hidden wires?
I have a Fluke Multi Meter, I have a Sperry Hot Stick and I have a Sperry Outlet and GFCI tester.
What had happened was that I had a heat gun plugged in, I plugged in something else and popped a circuit, or so I thought. When I built the garage in '99, I had some help wiring it and some of the outlets were back stabbed. I had this happen once before and found out that it screwed up an outlet internally with no visible signs of problems other than the tester showed on open Neutral. The problem I am having now is just like a lot of things, I can't remember how I ran the wiring. My garage used to be two bays, one for my '62 Impala, then the other bay to tinker with ****. Both sides were divided by a wall.
The garage has a closet that was the width of the one small bay and I have / had that bay on one circuit. The working bay is on 5 circuits. I thought that all of my outlets in the small bay were wired together. I did add an outlet up high for my traffic light, but I did this by just tying into the outlet below it. The lower outlet has two wires, the traffic light outlet has two wires, and the third outlet on the wall has one wire, so that is the end of the circuit. But that is where I plugged the heat gun in when something popped. So now, all three outlets on the one wall are dead.
I change the outlets on either side of the lower wall outlet hoping that one of them was the culprit but to no avail. I also went around and pulled out multiple outlets and swapped them out just in case, plus I found about three back stabbed outlets that needed changed.
Now here is another problem that I am really curious about........I killed the power to the small bay that I am having problems with. I checked some outlets with an Ohm Meter to try and track the wiring. The leads are only so long though. So what I did, where I had to check the outlet on one side of the wall from an outlet on the other side was to plug in an extension cord as sort of a long lead. In theory, it should work to see if hot to hot is connected. What I found was that when I checked with the Ohm Meter, the hot and the ground mad connection. It's hard to explain, so I could make a sketch showing how things are. The circuit shows no power, but the Ohm Meter says the hot and ground are connected with the circuit breaker shut off. I know that the neutrals should read as all connected, but i wouldn't think the hots would.
I also went around to every single outlet with the Outlet Tester, and every one shows good, other than the three dead ones. I could tie into the dead end outlet to a hot, but I really don't want to do that if there is a problem somewhere else. That's why I would like to know if there is something that with all of the power killed to the complete garage that I can trace the wires in the wall. I'm not an electrical genius, but I can get by running wiring and circuits, so things are not hacked, or at least I didn't think they were until I found certain amount of back-stabbed outlets. What I have found of those have been swapped out with the wires ran to the side screws.
And the dead wall I have really has me baffled. When I built the garage, I had the small bay all on one circuit. Later on I added a closet. From where I did have an outer wall outlet, now became an outlet in the closet. When I built the closet, I added an outlet outside of the closet and am almost 100% sure that I tied into the sidewall outlet, and ran around to the outer wall closet. Then it went up to a higher up outlet, then from that one over to one under my desk.
So if anyone knows of some sort of a tester that is maybe wireless but will send a signal so I can trace wires, PLEASE let me know. And if it isn't too expensive, I may buy one to have around.
Another thing too is that I have two outside floodlights 300w. When I put those in a number of years ago, I sort of remember how I ran them and tied into an outlet in the ceiling. I then ran wiring from the rear outside flood on the back to the flood on the front, plus ran the wires down to two separate switches. For some reason, those two floods don't work now. I don't know if the two are related or not as the floods are very rarely used. I'm thinking that the two floods are a coincidence and not too worried about them at the moment.
And before anyone says that thinks are a hack job, they are not hacked. Any electrical that I have ran has always passed inspections. It's just that with this, a few things have been changed in the garage, and it's been almost 14 years since I have built the garage, so I don't remember how things were ran. That is the reason of asking about some sort of a tester that would work in tracing hidden wires. Also the Sperry Hotstick, if I put the prong into an outlet, it flashed brightly and gives off a signal showing electricity. If I put it on the neutral side, it may blink or beep once or twice. But if I run it along the wall, it is constantly going off in large areas. I can touch the end and it will blink and beep. So in my mind, it's not very good for tracing wires in a wall but is good enough to show that you have electricity somewhere.
Any help at all will be greatly appreciated. I don't normally have something like this I can't figure out, but this has the **** baffled out of me.
I have a Fluke Multi Meter, I have a Sperry Hot Stick and I have a Sperry Outlet and GFCI tester.
What had happened was that I had a heat gun plugged in, I plugged in something else and popped a circuit, or so I thought. When I built the garage in '99, I had some help wiring it and some of the outlets were back stabbed. I had this happen once before and found out that it screwed up an outlet internally with no visible signs of problems other than the tester showed on open Neutral. The problem I am having now is just like a lot of things, I can't remember how I ran the wiring. My garage used to be two bays, one for my '62 Impala, then the other bay to tinker with ****. Both sides were divided by a wall.
The garage has a closet that was the width of the one small bay and I have / had that bay on one circuit. The working bay is on 5 circuits. I thought that all of my outlets in the small bay were wired together. I did add an outlet up high for my traffic light, but I did this by just tying into the outlet below it. The lower outlet has two wires, the traffic light outlet has two wires, and the third outlet on the wall has one wire, so that is the end of the circuit. But that is where I plugged the heat gun in when something popped. So now, all three outlets on the one wall are dead.
I change the outlets on either side of the lower wall outlet hoping that one of them was the culprit but to no avail. I also went around and pulled out multiple outlets and swapped them out just in case, plus I found about three back stabbed outlets that needed changed.
Now here is another problem that I am really curious about........I killed the power to the small bay that I am having problems with. I checked some outlets with an Ohm Meter to try and track the wiring. The leads are only so long though. So what I did, where I had to check the outlet on one side of the wall from an outlet on the other side was to plug in an extension cord as sort of a long lead. In theory, it should work to see if hot to hot is connected. What I found was that when I checked with the Ohm Meter, the hot and the ground mad connection. It's hard to explain, so I could make a sketch showing how things are. The circuit shows no power, but the Ohm Meter says the hot and ground are connected with the circuit breaker shut off. I know that the neutrals should read as all connected, but i wouldn't think the hots would.
I also went around to every single outlet with the Outlet Tester, and every one shows good, other than the three dead ones. I could tie into the dead end outlet to a hot, but I really don't want to do that if there is a problem somewhere else. That's why I would like to know if there is something that with all of the power killed to the complete garage that I can trace the wires in the wall. I'm not an electrical genius, but I can get by running wiring and circuits, so things are not hacked, or at least I didn't think they were until I found certain amount of back-stabbed outlets. What I have found of those have been swapped out with the wires ran to the side screws.
And the dead wall I have really has me baffled. When I built the garage, I had the small bay all on one circuit. Later on I added a closet. From where I did have an outer wall outlet, now became an outlet in the closet. When I built the closet, I added an outlet outside of the closet and am almost 100% sure that I tied into the sidewall outlet, and ran around to the outer wall closet. Then it went up to a higher up outlet, then from that one over to one under my desk.
So if anyone knows of some sort of a tester that is maybe wireless but will send a signal so I can trace wires, PLEASE let me know. And if it isn't too expensive, I may buy one to have around.
Another thing too is that I have two outside floodlights 300w. When I put those in a number of years ago, I sort of remember how I ran them and tied into an outlet in the ceiling. I then ran wiring from the rear outside flood on the back to the flood on the front, plus ran the wires down to two separate switches. For some reason, those two floods don't work now. I don't know if the two are related or not as the floods are very rarely used. I'm thinking that the two floods are a coincidence and not too worried about them at the moment.
And before anyone says that thinks are a hack job, they are not hacked. Any electrical that I have ran has always passed inspections. It's just that with this, a few things have been changed in the garage, and it's been almost 14 years since I have built the garage, so I don't remember how things were ran. That is the reason of asking about some sort of a tester that would work in tracing hidden wires. Also the Sperry Hotstick, if I put the prong into an outlet, it flashed brightly and gives off a signal showing electricity. If I put it on the neutral side, it may blink or beep once or twice. But if I run it along the wall, it is constantly going off in large areas. I can touch the end and it will blink and beep. So in my mind, it's not very good for tracing wires in a wall but is good enough to show that you have electricity somewhere.

Any help at all will be greatly appreciated. I don't normally have something like this I can't figure out, but this has the **** baffled out of me.


The transformer is one that is internally grounded, but there shouldn't be any continuity between the two prongs.





So most of the time, if I need something, I won't ask her to get it because that's what happens.