FMC1959
Well-known member
Let me first preface this by saying this house is very old, built in the year 1900. many of my neighbors homes were built in the 1890's, possibly earlier. A little rural village with 25-30 homes. I moved in, in 2020, a month before all the COVID lockdowns.
I have a light over our kitchen sink. Above it on the 2nd floor is the main bathroom. The toilet started having a leak at some point and water did trickle a couple of drops from the light and into the sink. A week or 2 later, the light stopped lighting.
I changed the toilet, and also changed the toilet flange and seal. That now looks to be working with no leaks anywhere.
The light has the light switch on the wall about 4 feet from the sink. It is a dual gang box with an outlet and the light switch. The light switch was fried. I also changed the outlet for a GFCI. Before installing the GFCI, I played with the wires a bit and saw that when I touched the light switch black wire to the one black line into the box, the light worked. Not knowing if there was still a short at the socket, I then proceeded to connect the GFCI line wires. Then connected the load wires going out of the box, not the light switch yet. I checked the outlet with a circuit tester and got the correct 2 green lights. When I connect the light switch wires to load, the black always tripped the GFCI.
I took the socket out from the ceiling. With the black, white and ground open/loose, the GFCI does not trip and the black wire shows power, using a no contact voltage detector. I added a new socket for testing and with the black & white connected, the GFCI does not trip. When I put a bulb in the socket, then it trips.
I didn't open the wall as it would also require removing a kitchen cabinet. But from the dual gang box, I can see the line wires coming in, then 2 loads going out; 1 for the switch and the other for something down the line, not sure what. The Romex 14/2 looks to go up the wall about 4 feet, then runs about 4-5 feet to the light above the sink. All looks pretty simple.
Taking the GFCO out, I could connect it with an ordinary outlet, but worry whatever is tripping the GFCI could fry the Romex wire in the wall, or the new socket, or new switch, or...something?
Anyone have any ideas what I am doing wrong, or how I should proceed?
I have a light over our kitchen sink. Above it on the 2nd floor is the main bathroom. The toilet started having a leak at some point and water did trickle a couple of drops from the light and into the sink. A week or 2 later, the light stopped lighting.
I changed the toilet, and also changed the toilet flange and seal. That now looks to be working with no leaks anywhere.
The light has the light switch on the wall about 4 feet from the sink. It is a dual gang box with an outlet and the light switch. The light switch was fried. I also changed the outlet for a GFCI. Before installing the GFCI, I played with the wires a bit and saw that when I touched the light switch black wire to the one black line into the box, the light worked. Not knowing if there was still a short at the socket, I then proceeded to connect the GFCI line wires. Then connected the load wires going out of the box, not the light switch yet. I checked the outlet with a circuit tester and got the correct 2 green lights. When I connect the light switch wires to load, the black always tripped the GFCI.
I took the socket out from the ceiling. With the black, white and ground open/loose, the GFCI does not trip and the black wire shows power, using a no contact voltage detector. I added a new socket for testing and with the black & white connected, the GFCI does not trip. When I put a bulb in the socket, then it trips.
I didn't open the wall as it would also require removing a kitchen cabinet. But from the dual gang box, I can see the line wires coming in, then 2 loads going out; 1 for the switch and the other for something down the line, not sure what. The Romex 14/2 looks to go up the wall about 4 feet, then runs about 4-5 feet to the light above the sink. All looks pretty simple.
Taking the GFCO out, I could connect it with an ordinary outlet, but worry whatever is tripping the GFCI could fry the Romex wire in the wall, or the new socket, or new switch, or...something?
Anyone have any ideas what I am doing wrong, or how I should proceed?