Don't ! get another GFI plug. there 4 dollars and the instructions come with it
I am trying to replace a light socket on a floor lamp that has a base night light and it has 4 wires one white one black and 2 brown
To wire up a car horn with a button you first need to run one of the wires from the horn to the battery. Take 1of the wires from the horn and run it to where you want the button to go. Connect the wire to the button and that's it.
No, not unless your connect the plug wires wrong or one of the new spark plugs was bad.
replacing the bulb is easy, just undo the bulbs socket, change the bulb and put the socket back in. if the bulb is good, check fuse, then switch, then wires.
remove the high voltage wires that connect to the top of the plug. take a spark plug socket, or a regular socket if you don't care and take out the plugs
One way is to connect it with copper wires and connect the copper wires with a light bulb's base where it is inserted into a socket. Usually it's a metal that would most likely conduct. Non-metals conduct very little or not at all.
Pull the spark plug wires off the spark plugs. Remove the spark plugs with a spark plug socket. Install the new spark plugs and put the spark plug wires back on. I recomend replacing the spark plug wires as well. If replacing them, just remember that the new wires are hooked up the same ways that the old ones came off.
It is not necessary to replace the coilpacks as routine maintenance. At around $70 each, it is a significant expense. Replace only the boots that connect from the coilpacks to the plugs. I think JC Whitney has the boots for $4 each. Replacing the boots is equivalent to replacing the wires on an older car. Do not replace the small wires going to each coil. They are not high energy wires.
If you socket is the same as the one I am trying to replace then you only use 2 wires. 1 black, 1 white (power coming in) and the the night light is attached with the white and the other wire comes from one of the terminals from the socket. The switch is similar to the 3-way switch, 1 for the light in the socket, 1 for the night light..and 1 turns both on. No, mine is different. I have to use four wires. I took mine to the local hardware store where a friend showed me how to rewire it. I then went home and rewired the other one sucessfully. Thanks for the info.
The cracked plug can cause the wires to spark and cause a fire. When the wires are plugged into it where the crack is the wires can touch the socket and cause the fire.
plug them in
plug them in