Electrical work should be straight forward, just like plumbing except with wires instead of pipes, right? Not always.
My garage lights are on a three way circuit. One switch is inside the house, next to the door from the garage to the kitchen. The other switch is on the other side of the garage in a totally useless location. I am finishing my garage so now is the time to move it. This three way circuit shares a breaker with another three way circuit, a four way circuit, four individually switched lights, and a switched bathroom fan.
So I shut off the breaker, disassemble the switch and box. This switch is at the end of the three way circuit so it has a single 14-3 wire running to it and nothing going out. I pull the wire back through all the studs to where it decends through the top plate. At this point I get distracted for about an hour or so. When I come back, I need to temporarily wire the switch back up so my garage lights will work. However, I realize I have forgotten which wire was the common wire for the three way switch. No Problem. I am a reasonably smart guy AND I own a multi-meter. I get it out, set it for 120V AC and turn the breaker back on. I start checking each of the wires back to the ground. Red wire, nothing. Black wire, 120Vs, there it is, that's the common. While I am at it check the white wire, 25 Vs WTF?
Anyone have a clue why I am getting 25Vs on that wire?
My garage lights are on a three way circuit. One switch is inside the house, next to the door from the garage to the kitchen. The other switch is on the other side of the garage in a totally useless location. I am finishing my garage so now is the time to move it. This three way circuit shares a breaker with another three way circuit, a four way circuit, four individually switched lights, and a switched bathroom fan.
So I shut off the breaker, disassemble the switch and box. This switch is at the end of the three way circuit so it has a single 14-3 wire running to it and nothing going out. I pull the wire back through all the studs to where it decends through the top plate. At this point I get distracted for about an hour or so. When I come back, I need to temporarily wire the switch back up so my garage lights will work. However, I realize I have forgotten which wire was the common wire for the three way switch. No Problem. I am a reasonably smart guy AND I own a multi-meter. I get it out, set it for 120V AC and turn the breaker back on. I start checking each of the wires back to the ground. Red wire, nothing. Black wire, 120Vs, there it is, that's the common. While I am at it check the white wire, 25 Vs WTF?
Anyone have a clue why I am getting 25Vs on that wire?



You damn straight; I work smarter too!