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Knob and tube!

Nealcrenshaw

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 20, 2008
Messages
3,401
Location
Cleveland,OH
Can someone inform me why does the wire wrap around the tube for insulation if the wires have insulation on them?
Why didn't they just run the wire without the tube?
 
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dipper

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 27, 2007
Messages
759
Location
Rochester, NY
there should be no talk of knob and tube on a garage forum! lol.
it's bad enough in houses. At least if it's in a garage, you can probably rip it all out easy enough and start over with some romex.
 

saywhat

Member
Joined
Oct 30, 2008
Messages
13
Unfortunately for me, I still have existing Knob and Tube in the attic along with other sketchy open splices from the previous owner, but it will be addressed this winter... Scary stuff...
 

tfi racing

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 19, 2008
Messages
2,907
Location
Cedar,BC
Is it really that scary?You have to consider the house hasn't burnt down in seventy five years and chances are nobody got electrocuted in it either!An original, unmolested knob and tube system is a real work of art and believe it or not,craftmanship,the electricians way back when took a lot of pride in their work.The ceramic tubes and insulators are just that,to protect the wood from the heat generated by the conductors.
Having said that,if you have that old **** in your house,I recommend getting it replaced as soon as possible!You are now past the safe ampacity limit of that system and do risk setting your house on fire!It was only intended to provide a light bulb in each room and not all the electrical appliances and equipment we have today.Most insurance companies will not insure your home if it has knob and tube wiring,so start budgeting for replacement.
 

trainer

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Joined
Nov 28, 2005
Messages
2,019
Location
Northern Ontario, Canada
Unmolested or not, i'd be re-wiring as soon as possible.
THe reason is that the wiring would be a minimum of 70 years old, and the insulation materials have probably deteriorated to some extent.
My house has the remains of some knob and tube wiring in the basement, and the insulation crumbles to the touch
 

bomber

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 31, 2006
Messages
207
Location
Group W Bench
AMEN -- the knob and tube in a previous house would shed it's insulaation if you looked at it sternly . . . . . .

while it's a kick to see, and would love to have it in my shop (looking like Edison's shop on Florida) I wouldn't want to have hot . . . .
 

Torque1st

MEMBER EMERITUS
Joined
Sep 14, 2008
Messages
5,668
Location
KC Metro, Kansas
A little knob and tube running to a clear light bulb in the shop running on about 90V with a fuse to protect it might be a real conversation piece. Along with the Tesla coil or Jacobs ladder in the corner and the old crank phone on the wall...
 

saywhat

Member
Joined
Oct 30, 2008
Messages
13
A little knob and tube running to a clear light bulb in the shop running on about 90V with a fuse to protect it might be a real conversation piece. Along with the Tesla coil or Jacobs ladder in the corner and the old crank phone on the wall...

I will make sure to save some of the old knobs for you after the updated stuff goes in.
 

kartracer23

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Joined
Aug 7, 2008
Messages
1,455
Location
New Castle, IN
Unfortunately for me, I still have existing Knob and Tube in the attic along with other sketchy open splices from the previous owner, but it will be addressed this winter... Scary stuff...

I've got some of those, too. Spliced with lamp cord & speed nuts. :)

Basically, here's what a number of electricians have told me: the stuff in the walls is probably fine and not worth pulling out if it's hard to get to. Replace anything that's easy to pull (first floor up from the basement, attic down to 2nd floor, etc.). Replace everything in attic & basement.

I've had estimates everywhere from $2,500 to $6,000 to rewire. I'm also going through and putting in the old style push-button switches-have a few rooms of those done.
 

Torque1st

MEMBER EMERITUS
Joined
Sep 14, 2008
Messages
5,668
Location
KC Metro, Kansas
I will make sure to save some of the old knobs for you after the updated stuff goes in.
Thanks! If you do let me know what the shipping is. I promise the wire run will be out of reach. :)

I have a ceramic and Bakelite toggle switch. I have seen turn style and pushbutton switches also.
 

dwilliams35

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Joined
Sep 27, 2008
Messages
271
Location
Pattison, TX
It's really some pretty good stuff once you get down to it: lasts a long, long time; I'd trust it over some of the early romex. Biggest problem is just the simple fact, as has been touched on here already, that it was put in when there was one 100w lamp and a single wall plug in any bedroom, maybe two plugs in a kitchen, etc. etc.: it generally follows a wiring scheme that just simply can't handle a 2008 electrical load: most whole houses were on one or two circuits.
 

rburke65

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 10, 2007
Messages
12,349
Location
Canfield, Ohio
I used to rewire houses for a small electrical contractor for 11 years. It was 90% of all the business he did. Knob and tube wiring is really a very safe wiring system. The only place the hot and the neautral wires even come close to one another is inside the boxes themselves. True the insulation on the wiring would be crispy by the time we would get there to rewire but there was no shame in that! Usually this was the wiring in the basement exposed to all the dampness in the summers (dirt floors) and the extreme heat in the winters from the old coal furnaces. It was that wiring that we would replace. And if left alone it was fine, it was when the home owner would start splicing here and tapping into it over here and.......before you know it it becomes a real over loaded fire trap! But the original wiring and the code of the day was very safe.
 

LoneGunman

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 27, 2007
Messages
2,081
Location
The Gunshine state
The insulation crumbling is scary but look how long it's lasted usually without problems. I've seen scarier romex wired houses by todays romex only electricians, the guys who claim to be an electrician but has only done new construction single family developements. I don't think I have ever ran across a PROPERLY done K&T splice that failed.
 
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nissan_crawler

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Jan 12, 2008
Messages
9,638
Location
Wichita, KS
Yeah, but the thing is, everybody's talking about "unmolested" and "properly done" knob and tube. When is the last time you saw a system that followed that? All the knob and tube wiring I've seen has been scary as hell. Yes, that was due to what had been done to it, but still.

You're talking 70 years of idiots changing it god knows how many times. I have the early romex that's insulated (still fine) and has the cloth binding to hold the wires in a group (whatever it's called). I'm rewiring the house. Is the wire itself bad? No, but there's no grounds, and what has been DONE to the wiring is downright atrocious in places.

One breaker will run a bed room light, 2 of the 4 outlets in another bedroom, the dining room light, an outlet in the kitchen, two outlets in the den, and the garage door opener. :spit: Seriously, wtf? :headscrat

I found one circuit to have 96 volts on it while the others have 118. :wtf: Yeah, that breaker is off until the wiring is redone.

While the basic principle of knob and tube may not be bad, almost every existing installation of it is, from what I've seen.
 

trainer

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Joined
Nov 28, 2005
Messages
2,019
Location
Northern Ontario, Canada
I think one of the main issues with K&T wiring is that over the years, the people who knew what they were doing and tried to do things right have replaced it with romex rather than trying to add on and splice into it. They people who did the hacks know just enough about wiring to get in trouble. (ever hear the phrase A 'little' Knowledge can be dangerous"?)

Also, I dont think there's many electricians around who are trained on K&T and they wouldnt want the liability of doing anything to it rather than replacing it.

My house also has some early romex without a ground on one circuit. It would be hard to replace without opening up the ceiling. I've added a Ground fault breaker to it until I can get it done right.
 

Blue

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Joined
Dec 15, 2005
Messages
1,115
Location
Northern Illinois
I've got some of those, too. Spliced with lamp cord & speed nuts. :)

Basically, here's what a number of electricians have told me: the stuff in the walls is probably fine and not worth pulling out if it's hard to get to. Replace anything that's easy to pull (first floor up from the basement, attic down to 2nd floor, etc.). Replace everything in attic & basement.

I've had estimates everywhere from $2,500 to $6,000 to rewire. I'm also going through and putting in the old style push-button switches-have a few rooms of those done.

Those price quotes are good to know. I have a large, old house, and I think it probably has a mix of K&T, romex, and who knows what else. And I KNOW there is all sorts of amateur wiring that's been done (Thanks a lot, Dad! :) ). Also has an old fuse box (no breakers). Several outlest in the house have just "stopped working." My guess is that if the insurance man ever saw it, he'd probably drop us. we've been in the house so long (30 yrs), with no claims, that they probably haven't kept up with it.
 

nadogail

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Joined
Jan 23, 2009
Messages
31,956
Location
Coronado, CA
I agree that Knob and Tube, properly done, is one of the safest wiring systems around. The "Properly Done" is a caveat because I don't think a book has been published on K&T since maybe the '40s. I used to read wiring books in the Public Library during the later half of the 40's. I remember stores selling knobs as late as '52.
 

BillK

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Joined
Aug 24, 2006
Messages
9,321
Location
Beautiful Southern Maryland
Nado,

Just curious how you came across this thread to reply to it ?? I am asking because I am a moderator on another car forum and it seems like since we switched to the XenForo forum software this has been happening more and more. 10 year old threads suddenly showing up.

Were you searching for "knob and tube" or did it just show up somehow ?
 

laser3kw

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Joined
Nov 17, 2012
Messages
7,276
Location
northen IL
A little knob and tube running to a clear light bulb in the shop running on about 90V with a fuse to protect it might be a real conversation piece. Along with the Tesla coil or Jacobs ladder in the corner and the old crank phone on the wall...
I bet he still writes checks too!
 

b-boy

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 2, 2013
Messages
2,155
Location
Buffalo NY
It's really some pretty good stuff once you get down to it: lasts a long, long time; I'd trust it over some of the early romex. Biggest problem is just the simple fact, as has been touched on here already, that it was put in when there was one 100w lamp and a single wall plug in any bedroom, maybe two plugs in a kitchen, etc. etc.: it generally follows a wiring scheme that just simply can't handle a 2008 electrical load: most whole houses were on one or two circuits.
I agree. My house had 1900ish tinned armored BX cable. That stuff scares me. The wires are cloth coated and crumble when touched. I've pulled most of it, but it's still in some of the walls. It's limited to lights now, but when I moved in it was everywhere. There were a few window A/C units and my wife's hairdryer running on it. It got overloaded all the time.

The really scary part was that I'd see armored BX running into the walls, and 3-wire romex coming out the other side. No box in the middle. Lots of in wall splicing.
 

jlv03

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 19, 2020
Messages
346
Location
SE IA
Nado,

Just curious how you came across this thread to reply to it ?? I am asking because I am a moderator on another car forum and it seems like since we switched to the XenForo forum software this has been happening more and more. 10 year old threads suddenly showing up.

Were you searching for "knob and tube" or did it just show up somehow ?
The similar threads feature on the bottom of the page is likely the culprit.

Two ways to deal with it - start locking threads after no activity after ** time, or enjoy dusting off nostalgia.
 

MerlinsBeard

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Joined
Mar 27, 2020
Messages
398
Location
MD
I don't think the post necromancy is malicious, seems to be related to the similar threads feature.
 

Metal-Marc

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Joined
Aug 31, 2009
Messages
7,172
Location
Foothills of the Adirondacks
Nado,

Just curious how you came across this thread to reply to it ?? I am asking because I am a moderator on another car forum and it seems like since we switched to the XenForo forum software this has been happening more and more. 10 year old threads suddenly showing up.

Were you searching for "knob and tube" or did it just show up somehow ?
On another car forum I often browse there is a well known member bumping very old threads for no good reason.
 

egdede

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Dec 20, 2009
Messages
2,085
Old threads for old techniques : ) An old-timer on my first job site in the 70s claimed to have watched knob and tube being installed on homes built in the 20s or 30s on his first job site. The 14 guage wire we were looking at had meticulously twisted connections soldered in silver. He said all connections were twisted up and the electrician walked around with a heated pot of solder and dipped the twisted connections into the solder pot. The ones in my home are secure at 95 years of age. The tape they wrapped them in (not so much).
 
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