fan-of-fans
Well-known member
Our house was built in 1976 and from time to time I wonder about the wiring. I assume it's ok, it's never been messed with and it's not overloaded to my knowledge.
The strange thing is I've been told the entire house is wired with wire gauge that is for a 20 amp circuit, even on the 15 amp circuits. Also some of the distribution of the circuits is a little strange, for instance rooms that share walls such as the hallway and bedrooms tend to have their outlets on the same circuits. So for example, the 20 amp circuit marked washing machine also turns off outlets in the hallway that shares walls with the laundry room. Found that out when trying to vacuum and do laundry.
Also the refrigerator outlet and the outlet in the pantry behind the freezer are on same 20 amp circuit.
The outlet on back porch is on same circuit as the living room?
Otherwise, everything looks pretty good. We've replaced a few old outlets and switches here and there if they wore out or to change colors. Hadn't noticed anything that looked bad.
I think I've always been a bit paranoid of having the house burn down. Even as a kid I used to have dreams about my house catching fire.
All of the wiring is plastic coated romex, so I assume what I can't see in the walls should be ok. Usually when I hear of wiring problems it's knob and tube or cloth romex. But the plastic romex is getting close to 50 years old so I do worry about it getting old and unsafe.
One thing that I do recall that was concerning about the outlets is, they have no ground wire attached to them. The ground is connected to the metal wall boxes and they are grounded through that. The old outlets were all wired with push in wiring, there were no terminals on them. As they've been replaced we've used the terminal method, as it seems more secure. I'm getting the idea it might be best to replace all the remaining old outlets as well with terminal wired ones.
The strange thing is I've been told the entire house is wired with wire gauge that is for a 20 amp circuit, even on the 15 amp circuits. Also some of the distribution of the circuits is a little strange, for instance rooms that share walls such as the hallway and bedrooms tend to have their outlets on the same circuits. So for example, the 20 amp circuit marked washing machine also turns off outlets in the hallway that shares walls with the laundry room. Found that out when trying to vacuum and do laundry.
Also the refrigerator outlet and the outlet in the pantry behind the freezer are on same 20 amp circuit.
The outlet on back porch is on same circuit as the living room?
Otherwise, everything looks pretty good. We've replaced a few old outlets and switches here and there if they wore out or to change colors. Hadn't noticed anything that looked bad.
I think I've always been a bit paranoid of having the house burn down. Even as a kid I used to have dreams about my house catching fire.
All of the wiring is plastic coated romex, so I assume what I can't see in the walls should be ok. Usually when I hear of wiring problems it's knob and tube or cloth romex. But the plastic romex is getting close to 50 years old so I do worry about it getting old and unsafe.
One thing that I do recall that was concerning about the outlets is, they have no ground wire attached to them. The ground is connected to the metal wall boxes and they are grounded through that. The old outlets were all wired with push in wiring, there were no terminals on them. As they've been replaced we've used the terminal method, as it seems more secure. I'm getting the idea it might be best to replace all the remaining old outlets as well with terminal wired ones.