Dick in Wisconsin
Well-known member
The house was built in 1955. There were a few updates to the electrical over the years, but very few. Most of the outlets in the house are like this pictured with no center ground prong hole. I believe the wiring has a metal sheath and might be called "BX"?
Today's wiring has three wires: hot, neutral, and ground.
Is it correct to presume that the 1955 wiring has a hot, neutral, and the metal sheath is the ground?
Can I replace the existing old two prong outlets with current outlets (three prong) by attaching the ground screw of the new outlet to metal box in the wall? I'm presuming the metal box in the wall is attached to the metal sheath of the cable which is grounded back at the panel.
If not, what is the procedure for updating these outlets without pulling new wire back to the main panel.
Today's wiring has three wires: hot, neutral, and ground.
Is it correct to presume that the 1955 wiring has a hot, neutral, and the metal sheath is the ground?
Can I replace the existing old two prong outlets with current outlets (three prong) by attaching the ground screw of the new outlet to metal box in the wall? I'm presuming the metal box in the wall is attached to the metal sheath of the cable which is grounded back at the panel.
If not, what is the procedure for updating these outlets without pulling new wire back to the main panel.
