Just thought I'd pass this along. for those of you that are handy and even for those that aren't it might make sense to hire someone to do a rudimentary check of your wiring.
Here's a story of what I found. I use X10 to control some lighting year round and a lot during the holidays. It can be flaky at times and little things can cause problems, but all in all it's a cheap effective way to control lots of things. I upgraded my software, my computer controls all the lights, and some of the modules were acting up. I decided as I was cleaning house to inspect and replace the outlets in each room. In late December the house will be 45 years old, we moved in when I was a little kid, and some of the outlets were sloppy. Over the years I replaced a few here and there but not many.
Anyway I found that several had the ground wire unattached to the metal box, so the outlet was not grounded, and some had broken ground wires. All were simply wired by pushing the wires into the back of the plug, nothing wrong with that, but I prefer to pigtail and wire-nut my connections so if there is a problem with the outlet the rest of the circuit is intact. Most I replaced the outlet, but some I just inspected.
In my kitchen I looked at one outlet and found some tape wrapped around the black feed, but other than that it looked fine. I pushed the outlet back into the box and moved on to the next one. About half and hour later I went to the fridge to get something and noticed it was not running. I thought, what did I do...
Checked the circuit breaker and it was fine, checked the outlets I worked on and they seemed fine, I pulled the one with a bit of tape on the wire out and it looked fine too. Nothing showed up as a problem. Went back and pulled the first outlet on the circuit apart for the third time, this was the one with a bit of tape on the wires and found that the wire was actually broken INSIDE the insulation! Apparently it had been for years, that is whey the tape was on the wire. It arced and burned the insulation off. Now, since the house was built in '65 they only ran one circuit for the entire kitchen. The fridge, all the counter outlets and some of the perimeter outlets were on one 20 amp circuit. So the current to the fridge, coffee pot and the electric grill or waffle iron all passed through this broken wire. Luckily there never was a fire.
This has prompted me to be a bit more aggressive and check each outlet in the house. I also tightened down all the connections in my circuit panel, quite a few were loose. At some point I will split up that circuit, adding 2 more circuits. Of course if you are not comfortable working around electricity this is not for you, but I encourage everyone to have their wiring inspected at some point if it is older home...
Here's a story of what I found. I use X10 to control some lighting year round and a lot during the holidays. It can be flaky at times and little things can cause problems, but all in all it's a cheap effective way to control lots of things. I upgraded my software, my computer controls all the lights, and some of the modules were acting up. I decided as I was cleaning house to inspect and replace the outlets in each room. In late December the house will be 45 years old, we moved in when I was a little kid, and some of the outlets were sloppy. Over the years I replaced a few here and there but not many.
Anyway I found that several had the ground wire unattached to the metal box, so the outlet was not grounded, and some had broken ground wires. All were simply wired by pushing the wires into the back of the plug, nothing wrong with that, but I prefer to pigtail and wire-nut my connections so if there is a problem with the outlet the rest of the circuit is intact. Most I replaced the outlet, but some I just inspected.
In my kitchen I looked at one outlet and found some tape wrapped around the black feed, but other than that it looked fine. I pushed the outlet back into the box and moved on to the next one. About half and hour later I went to the fridge to get something and noticed it was not running. I thought, what did I do...
Checked the circuit breaker and it was fine, checked the outlets I worked on and they seemed fine, I pulled the one with a bit of tape on the wire out and it looked fine too. Nothing showed up as a problem. Went back and pulled the first outlet on the circuit apart for the third time, this was the one with a bit of tape on the wires and found that the wire was actually broken INSIDE the insulation! Apparently it had been for years, that is whey the tape was on the wire. It arced and burned the insulation off. Now, since the house was built in '65 they only ran one circuit for the entire kitchen. The fridge, all the counter outlets and some of the perimeter outlets were on one 20 amp circuit. So the current to the fridge, coffee pot and the electric grill or waffle iron all passed through this broken wire. Luckily there never was a fire.
This has prompted me to be a bit more aggressive and check each outlet in the house. I also tightened down all the connections in my circuit panel, quite a few were loose. At some point I will split up that circuit, adding 2 more circuits. Of course if you are not comfortable working around electricity this is not for you, but I encourage everyone to have their wiring inspected at some point if it is older home...