Yes, but it could be risky. Like for a 220 or 110 ac volts, i would suggest you wear leather or thick rubber gloves to insulate your hand. Or tape one of the open wire to be connected with electrical tape and when 1 line is connected then you can remove the tape and connect the 2nd wire or line. Just make sure the 2 wires dont touch each other also wear leather shoes
No, many electricians wire devices in "hot" but it states in the dimmer installation sheet that the dimmer should be in the switched off position. That does not mean to the lowest dim setting but to the off indent. If the dimmer was on and you shorted wires out when you were installing a light fixture then that is different again. The high current created by the short circuit would have traveled through the dimmer and that will give good cause for the dimmer switch to not work.
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Only if you are completing the circuit without any resistance, and that's if the current flowing through whatever you are wiring goes directly through the dimmer and it exceed it's tolerance. In general though, you should not wire anything when there is still current lest you become it's path of least resistance.
If you are an electrician sometimes they don't, but I guess if you were an electrician you would not be asking this question.
To answer the question accurately then the answer is no. But it is always safer to shut the breaker off when working on any electrical equipment. Don't depend on the switch ahead of the light as a safety disconnect means. Someone could come along and inadvertently turn it on with out your knowing about it. Then you get a shocking surprise when you start working on the circuit. It is easier to work on equipment when the power is off because you don't have to keep thinking about grounding the "hot" wire out or getting between the potential and ground yourself. That situation can give you a nasty shock and you end up asking your self why didn't I shut the breaker off. Last word, shut the breaker off, put a piece of black tape across the breaker to notify anyone that the circuit is off on purpose, remove the tape and turn circuit back on when job is finished.
It is possible, but it is extremely dangerous. You could easily get electrocuted.
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This sounds very strange. You should not have an unswitched bathroom light. Replace fixture with one with a pull chain. Turn breaker off before changing the fixture.
You use the correct size breaker depending on the size wire in the circuit. If the circuit is wired with AWG #12 wire use a 20 amp breaker. If it is wired with AWG #14 wire then use a 15 amp breaker.
No, add new breaker,find a junction box and split the series, or add a box and split the load. You only need to do this if the breaker is tripping from overload. 12ga wire should have a 20amp breaker not a 15amp. If I understand your question,wired in parallel, this would be one hot connected to two breakers, first off two breakers is 220v not 120v , and 220v has two hot wires. Never connect two breakers together on one line.
It is a relay or switch problem. A circuit breaker or fuse won't keep a light on.
Your only hope is that someone wired the box not to code and that there are two wires going into the offending breaker. If you can't separate wires you can't distribute the load.
This sounds very strange. You should not have an unswitched bathroom light. Replace fixture with one with a pull chain. Turn breaker off before changing the fixture.
50 amp breaker wired with AWG # 6 wire.
You use the correct size breaker depending on the size wire in the circuit. If the circuit is wired with AWG #12 wire use a 20 amp breaker. If it is wired with AWG #14 wire then use a 15 amp breaker.
No, add new breaker,find a junction box and split the series, or add a box and split the load. You only need to do this if the breaker is tripping from overload. 12ga wire should have a 20amp breaker not a 15amp. If I understand your question,wired in parallel, this would be one hot connected to two breakers, first off two breakers is 220v not 120v , and 220v has two hot wires. Never connect two breakers together on one line.
A drawout breaker has two parts (base and breaker). The base is wired to the load frame and bolted in. The breaker slides in and out of the base, and connects physically and electrically to the base (so it's easy to rack out for maintenance). A fixed mounted circuit breaker is bolted directly to the enclosure and wired to the load frame.
It is a relay or switch problem. A circuit breaker or fuse won't keep a light on.
how to connect cables to switches 240 box
Your only hope is that someone wired the box not to code and that there are two wires going into the offending breaker. If you can't separate wires you can't distribute the load.
It's because they are not wired in a 3-way fashion. The switch downstairs is wired in series with the switch upstairs in the same manner the pullchain on a light socket adapter would turn on and off your light only when the wall's switch is on.
If either switch is turned on the light will be on. BUT- If the switches were wired to different phases of the AC power source they would be out of phase and blow the breaker if they were turned on at the same time.
It is not the number of bulbs that you worry about. It is the wire size that is your concern. If the circuit is wired with AWG 12/2 wire then use a 20 amp breaker. If it is wired with a AWG 14/2 wire then use a 15 amp breaker. You are protecting the wiring with the correct size breaker.
A 30 amp breaker wired with AWG #10 wire.