Other Video Links here>> California 3-Way - kzbin.info/www/bejne/d5a7d5hrnM2ggbM Chicago 3-Way - kzbin.info/www/bejne/gaqXaatsgd2oj6M
@MrAdamNTProtester6 ай бұрын
The reason you only need ONE box with the neutral is bcuz dimmer switches at the moment can't communicate with one another- if my case is ever heard I will rectify that... hence you can ONLY HAVE ONE DIMMER on a 3-way switching system. Eventually you will simply require a NEUTRAL at all switch locations... we aren't there yet!
@PizzaMan-ItsaRomethingeverydayАй бұрын
I worked as an apprentice with a journeyman for 3 years doing electrical wiring, mostly light receptacles, switches, and plug ins, still doing minor electrical for property owners around where I live it's a great little income
@TomKaren949 ай бұрын
I got an eerie feeling during the description of the 3-way and 4-way circuits. Then I realized my father had described this to me in almost exactly the same way in nearly the exact same words when I was a kid... 60 years ago. Great explanation, great channel.
@chrism20429 ай бұрын
I started as an electrical helper when I was a teen, learned 3-ways & 4-ways from the guy I worked for which was in his 60's then. Been state licensed since 1993, electrical contractor for many years and over 20 years as an engineer. Still show 3-ways & 4-ways wired this way.
@msimon68089 ай бұрын
@@chrism2042 I started out in pinballs and juke boxes.
@danielbrewer84724 ай бұрын
Year did 12 wire become code in 3 and 4 way?
@twwetwet3 ай бұрын
@@chrism2042 my brain got overloaded almost immediately listening to this. I know more than the average guy about electrical, but never could grasp these things.
@JamesNeubauer-z3v15 күн бұрын
Don't wire the house you sleep in, call a electrician if you want to wake up in the morning and have confidence that your house won't burn down while sleeping 😂😊😊😊😊
@sirsuse9 ай бұрын
Thank you very much John. This is probably the easiest to follow explanation of 3-way switch wiring I have seen on KZbin.
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
Thank you.. Glad it was helpful..
@kabic78939 ай бұрын
I Agee. Very good explanation
@napoleonsmith77939 ай бұрын
DITTOOOOOO
@yvesduranceau1239 ай бұрын
Finally, a well done explanation. Thank you very much.!
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
You are very welcome.. @@yvesduranceau123
@narlycharley9 ай бұрын
This is exactly what KZbin is great for. Thank you for the great video.
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@shockingguy9 ай бұрын
I have installed many complicated four-way circuits and three-way circuits in properties, I always draw it out, most of these have included conduit and Romex wiring, so if you have a complicated switch locations just draw it all out and start connecting the dots then figure out how many wires you need between each point and how you’re going to get them there, for example you have a four-way circuit that might have four switches, one by the back sliding door, one out on the patio somewhere in a wall, one upstairs in the bedroom and another by the gate coming into the backyard this is a complex circuit Only in the fact that you will have to figure out how to get all the wire from where it needs to go and then to all the different lighting just draw it out start figuring out your runs and it’s very simple at that point
@TonyP92798 ай бұрын
The hardest part is FINDING a 4-way switch! Most of the hardwares stores here don't have them...except for that ONE odd store that's the furthest away.
@shockingguy8 ай бұрын
@@TonyP9279 Well yeah that would suck, if you don’t have an electrical supply house or a big box store, I guess the only answer there is to keep a few on hand
@Mk101T8 ай бұрын
@@TonyP9279 Well you could use two 3-ways in a double box to get 4-way functionality . Link them with their commons together .
@Mk101T8 ай бұрын
@@TonyP9279 Or I suppose you could try to tell them that odd numbers of switch locations have been outlawed . So you need to install 4 locations ... thereby you can use only 3 way switches . With the 2 middle of the line ones , being only connected with a single conductor on their commons . Hehe lol . But then of course can just wire nut the two travelers till the 4-way shows up in the mail . Edit: Scratch that about four 3-way switches being able to work . Was before enough morning coffee and thought I was being clever . Ya obviously the 2 switch combo won't let power through for the last leg switch position to function for turning the light on ... Duh :\
@vernebolton43634 ай бұрын
Three way and four way circuits are easy if you remember that one end of the circuit will have the power feed and the other end has the switch leg. All wires between the switches are travelers. Red and black wires are the travelers using 3 wire Romex.Tie neutrals together and tie grounds together. Stuff in the rear of the outlet box. I can do these type of circuits without even thinking.
@jeffsim86649 ай бұрын
That is the best description of iow to 3 and 4 ways. I've done them before but always takes me longer to watch the videos 4 times than actuslly wire it in. Yours was clear and concise
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
Thank you sir.. I do my best.
@brainwater9 ай бұрын
Yeah, I finally understand how to wire a three-way after watching this!
@PRR19549 ай бұрын
I like to print-out the best representation of the way I wired a 3- or 4-way loop and tuck copies in each switchbox or by the cellar lamp, where The Next Guy is sure to find it. "always takes me longer to watch the videos 4 times than actually wire it in." True that. I learn better from well-drawn drawings. Although that could mean flipping every wiring book in the library, cuz some are/were just awful. Now books are going out of style. BM's video is pretty good, and I thank him for that. But if you go to a yard sale for deals on workpants or moosetraps, see if they have 50-cent wiring books.
@bobd51198 ай бұрын
Thanks for the explanation! When I was a teenager, I figured out the three-way wiring schematic for the SPDT switches. Now, decades later, I couldn't figure it out in several tries. The diagrams are a huge help.
@normtheteacher54857 ай бұрын
What I have done to retain memory of how Three and Four way wiring systems work is to make a working model of one on a panel of plywood. The model even has a breaker box with breakers on it. The breaker box simply plugs into an outlet for power. This gives me a micro model to view when my memory on how to wire things up starts to fade. The model actually works and turns on a light bulb from two different switches. To make the models I go to Menards and buy and use the actual wire, gang boxes, outlets, bulb receptacle, breaker box with breakers that one would use in a house. Each model costs me about $45 to make. The breaker box alone is about a $20 cost. I just use a small two breaker box. Not a full sized one. I bolt the model to a wall, plug the models breaker box into an outlet and actually use it at times for lighting. I also make a very detailed color drawing on graph paper of the model's wiring system that is mounted on the wall next to the model. Is great to have when teaching my grandkids about electrical wiring concepts.
@Acts2-389 ай бұрын
I really enjoy this channel. Very easy to understand, no swearing, code updates, just great overall!! I did want to mention that I just wired a 4-way switch and it had 2 black screws and 2 gold screws. Thanks for the video!
@Omniverse02 ай бұрын
Oh no, not swear words! Those are the fucking worst!
@Roy-ij1wq9 ай бұрын
Excellent video. My jurisdiction is 10 years behind the current code and the inspector is more concerned with the lenght of ground wires than the absence of a neutral. People who pull homeowner permits don't realize problems they will encounter if they want to take advantage of new technology and this video is exceptional.
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
Thanks so much.
@johnirwin18379 ай бұрын
This old retired electrician is still old school. Don't need smart switches.
@Roy-ij1wq9 ай бұрын
@@johnirwin1837 I don't need them now. But I'm 73 years old and want the house I'm remodeling to be my forever home. Smart switch technology will allow me to operate all of the electronics from anywhere. I'm also putting in curbless showers, wider doors, hardwood floors, lever door handles, and pull down kitchen shelves. Plus, the 2023 code requires that the wiring meet the current code if the walls are open and exposed which they are.
@rickgilbrt9 ай бұрын
@@johnirwin1837 Some smart switches are nice for scheduling lighting on-off times (and brightness), particularly for exterior lights.
@johnirwin18379 ай бұрын
@@rickgilbrt True, but I am still old school and old so I won't be using them in my next little wiring project. In 10 to 15 years if the next guy wants them they can install them on their dime.
@Anonymous-zv9hk8 ай бұрын
This was a great explanation of the latest changes in those parts of the National Electrical Code that are going to affect most homeowners and DIYers. Thanks for taking the time to carefully explain the material and thanks to AG1 for being a sponsor.
@BackyardMaine8 ай бұрын
Glad it was helpful! Thanks for watching.
@UKCG_29 ай бұрын
Excellent explanation of both the proper way to wire a single pole and three-way switch, but also the changes resulting from the code changes!
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
Thank you..
@curtislowe45779 ай бұрын
Learn something new every day. In the five houses I've lived in (including my folks' house built in 1957) I never saw a two wire loop. Ever. The fourth house was built in 1973 and at that time the area was in the county miles from the city it was a suburb of. Whoever wired it learned on 12v negative ground systems bc the neutral in the entire home was the black wire. Plus they consistently cut off the ground wire. And the icing on the cake? Aluminum wiring. I did research on aluminum wiring. The history of aluminum wiring and its shortcomings are interesting.
@T-Hogie9 ай бұрын
Don't know if it's code compliant or not but electrically that dead-end switch circuit can be extended. Just replace SW2 with a 4-way and move the 3-way over to the new SW3 location and run your wire from SW2 to the SW3 location. Something that always used to confuse me because I cane from an electronics background and knew what was actually inside the 3-way and 4-way switches. 3-way is a SPDT and the 4-way is a DPDT switch wired as a reverser internally.
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
Yup you can do that but you're still just extending the switched power which will have to get back to switch one to actually turn on your light.
@PatrickKQ4HBD9 ай бұрын
Does the 4-way still have a neutral this way?
@stargazer76449 ай бұрын
And another interesting note is in Europe a 3-way switch is called a 2-way switch which if you think about it makes much more sense.
@TheForgottenMan2709 ай бұрын
@@stargazer7644if true, Europe is basing the name off of the number of locations, while here in the States we base it off of the number of wires required for the switch to function. A 3-way switch will always and only function with 3 wires. 4-ways will always and only function with 4 wires. If you wanted you can have 20 switches to work a single light. All it would take are 2 3-ways and 18 4-ways.
@stargazer76449 ай бұрын
@@TheForgottenMan270 So why is the word "way" included? I rather think Europeans call them 2 way switches because the switch selects one of two ways current can go out of the switch. American 4 way switches are called intermediate switches in Europe, not 3 way switches.
@Sparky-ww5re9 ай бұрын
When roughing in a house I prefer to run the feed into the switch box, then run the two wire cable to the light fixture. Though I have wired switch loops using 3 wire plus ground cable in certain situations, usually in renovations when I need to add a switch a pull chain style luminaire while doing minimal drywall damage. I'd like to see you finish this video with another video demonstrating the Chicago and California methods. You just earned a new subscriber
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
Ive been hearing that in the comments. I'll make another video.
@jimfee27539 ай бұрын
Don't show these guys the suicide 3 way please. You're going to really get someone hurt. You've shown all that they need. If they want to know more they need to do an apprenticeship. Someone's gonna get hurt.
@blackhat49689 ай бұрын
Nice explanation. Never heard of a Chicago 3way or a California 3way. would loved to have heard what they were. Checked and found another KZbin video that described them.
@greatnew_products74369 ай бұрын
The Chicago includes a Tommy gun and the California an emissions test, right?😮
@AlyssaNguyen2 ай бұрын
@@greatnew_products7436 That certainly would fit with Chicago being ❌ and California being ❔
@someoneoncesaid69789 ай бұрын
Going to the switch first, then the light, seems the most logical method. It keeps the wire colors consistent so the homeowner can easily tell what's what if they ever change out switches or lights.
@espressomatic9 ай бұрын
That's relatively unimportant. The important part is that you lose neutral at the light switch, making it a HUGE pain in the ass, and IMO, has always been a hard NO. but, 90% of electricians past and present suck and I wouldn't trust them to ever do any of my electrical work.
@r7boatguy9 ай бұрын
I've never understood the logic of wiring the power to the fixture, then running a cable to the switch. Much more logical to do as you say.
@cosmicinsane5169 ай бұрын
@@r7boatguySaves money, time, and wire. That being said I wouldn’t do it in my own house. All my switches were wired that way when I got the place, most of them been replaced now. I did just help a friend completely rewire his house and we did the switches with no neutral. He was more concerned with money and wire.
@ronb61829 ай бұрын
No I always feed the hot and neutral at the light box it's much easier in Florida since we have no basements. All the wires come down from the attic. You would use more wire feeding the hot and neutral at the switch location. You would have double wire going back to the light. 73 feeding wires down a wall are always a chore. 73
@Tom-og7fi9 ай бұрын
@espressomatic so what you are saying is you are the god of electricity. What a rube.
@ChrisD-kl3ty4 ай бұрын
9:45 now I finally understand how 3 ways work. I've replaced alot but just match the old and new without a true understanding until just now. Thanks for the clear presentation.
@BackyardMaine4 ай бұрын
Great to hear!
@b.powell34809 ай бұрын
Great video, however, I was hoping you'd show the wiring for the California switch setup and for the Chicago switch setup and descibe why they're not code compliant, thanks
@Stevenj120volts9 ай бұрын
California three way has no neutral at any switch. And a Chicago three way can have power at the light even when it's off or also reverse polarity
@Melds9 ай бұрын
I was curious too and looked them up. Chicago has two separate connections to the light and both switch hot and neutral. If it's neutral from both or hot from both (!) then the light is off. California just switches the hot but has three travelers, with T1, T2, and common all wired together. T2 goes to the hot side of the light and T1 goes to the hot. Neutral goes to the light.
@okaro65959 ай бұрын
@@Melds This apparently is also called Carter three way. It was banned a hundred years ago. Sin short the witches were reversed so that the power came (to both) from the side with two contacts and the sides with one contact went to the light. Since it was the knob and tube era with single wire cables that made some sense though the risk is obvious. With modern cables that would make no sense at all.
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
Great suggestion! I'll make a video on those two methods as well.
@b.powell34809 ай бұрын
@@BackyardMaine Thanks, you're videos are very helpful, also, I know the code also says that all outlets, gfci not withstanding, have to be replaced with the arc fault circuit type, hopefully you can do a video on that as well
@gbinman3 ай бұрын
That was easily the clearest diagram/explanation of a 4 way installation. I have that same setup in my home. I spent some time with the 3 switch boxes open trying to figure out what they did. My reason was to install a dimmer. SW1 is the correct switch to replace with the dimmer. I mostly guessed which was SW1 vs SW3 because SW1 was far closer to the load panel. I know I could test with meter to verify and I will before installing the dimmer (future project). Sometimes just looking in boxes is hard to figure what they did. My house was built in 1991 and the electrician was cheap with romex, pretty much always the shortest path possible. You should see my attic, it looks like a spider ran the wiring. They also combined light circuits with receptacles, that may be to code but I don't like it much. When I bought the house, I replaced all the old style toggle switches with rockers.
@michaeldeloatch74619 ай бұрын
New to your channel, and you enticed me with options 1 and 2 that are not compliant but you didn't explain. Leading me to look them both up. They are marvelous rube goldberg class craziness! Best when used with knob and tubes, I bet, for that extra zing. Seriously, thanks for a great video.
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
I'll make another video showing the Chicago and California methods. I didn't want to confuse anyone.
@xHadesStamps5 ай бұрын
Extra zing, indeed!
@markgriff92654 ай бұрын
Just wired up a room using the "Dead end method". It works as it should. Thank you for making this video, really took the questions out on how to wire.
@BackyardMaine4 ай бұрын
Awesome great job.
@ericrichardson17409 ай бұрын
Is it required to use 12-2 for a 3-way light switch?
@ericwoodruff98179 ай бұрын
Well done video! Same question though - why 12 gauge wire for lighting circuit?
@kc9scott9 ай бұрын
Not required if the circuit breaker is 15A or less.
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
4/2 if fine if on a 15A circuit breaker. I didn't want to say 14/2 and have someone connect that to a 20A circuit.
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
4/2 if fine if on a 15A circuit breaker. I didn't want to say 14/2 and have someone connect that to a 20A circuit.
@calvinyounts31776 ай бұрын
You should say that the switches need to be rated at 20 amps if it's on a 20 amp breaker. #12 wire isn't required, and most lighting is on 15 amp circuits. Which will save money on the switches, breakers, and wiring.
@lukeanderson4392 ай бұрын
The Algo sent me here for some reason. I'm an 01 Electrician (commercial/industrial) and just did this work in my garage. 3 cheap fixtures -> 12 LED 1 switch -> 2x 3-way Split some lights off for task lighting controlled by SP switch near their respective doors. While I'm not interested in any smart devices where my garage lights are concerned, there are cases where a future home owner might. For instance, smart switching can be part of a disability accommodation where mobility or reach is limited. Regardless, neutrals at the switch location is both code compliant and a good idea. That being said, if I had to tear down any finish work to preserve or add a neutral, I'd skip it. This is a choice I make in my own home. Fortunately, an electrician can get a lot done by adding a junction box. By doing this, there is no longer a need to bring the neutral back out of the switch box. That return neutral conductor is now a free agent! Like others have said, REIDENTIFY YOUR WIRES when necessary. Phase tape comes in all the colors. Stay safe!
@dereksellars9 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video! That was very helpful. I always get confused about 3 ways for some reason. But that made a lot of sense. Thank You!!
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
Thank you.. Glad to help.
@tms25688 ай бұрын
We used to refer to those 2 different ways to wire a 3-way as: 1.Take the neutral to the light; or 2. Feed the farthest switch first. Good way to remember them. Which one to choose depends on how the circuit is run. Nice video. Thanks.
@BackyardMaine8 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing
@maxxswagster92839 ай бұрын
Thanks for reassuring the correct way to wire a single pole, 3-way, and 4-way switch
@davidlittle049 ай бұрын
These past few code videos you’ve posted are among the best teaching videos I’ve ever watched on Electrician KZbin. New subscriber, I look forward to more of your excellent, easy to understand content. If this were feedback on eBay, I’d say “A++ seller, highly recommended!!”
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
Wow, thanks! Much appreciated. More to come.
@michaelpolimer21286 ай бұрын
I'm not an electrician but a retired EE who designed RADAR transmitters, it seems to me that running a neutral to every box during construction is a small cost with huge benefits in the future. We always designed "spares" into every wire harness and control panel.
@BackyardMaine6 ай бұрын
I was an EE as well before I retired. Spares are a must for industrial applications. I think it's a best practice to feed the switch first. Not only does that leave a neutral should you ever need one but also allows you to add a receptacle at the switch or even right below it if needed with minimal effort.
@onesimpleneedАй бұрын
Builders are cheap. Real cheap. Really really cheap. How cheap? At their circumcision they didn’t leave a tip!
@onesimpleneedАй бұрын
And I’m also an EE as well
@michaelodonnell8306Ай бұрын
Also EE, industrial electrical is among the most premium work. Residential home electrical are on the other end of the market.
@waynemiller60709 ай бұрын
You've made this easier for me to understand for sure. I could not diagram it out without watching this video multiple times. But for a first time viewing it was very very clear.
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
Thanks. Happy to help.
@seephor9 ай бұрын
I always include a neutral in a switch box. There are some switch devices today that require one and I've seen people use the ground as the neutral leg in these situations causing a dangerous situation down the line for whoever works on that circuit in the future.
@ragtowne9 ай бұрын
I once encountered a BATHROOM (house built in 19:90 in California) that had two switches (one for the lights and one for the exhaust fan), went to replace the light/fan unit, discovered they only ran a single 14 gauge two wire romex to that device and used the black for the light power, the white for the fan power, and the unshielded ground for common for both with NO grounding - talk about confusing and a code violation.
@troubleshooter19759 ай бұрын
@@ragtowneLet's hope they didn't do the same in the main panel! [gee this 2/0 white wire is expensive, let's just use this 6ga ground wire here!]
@troubleshooter19759 ай бұрын
It will also raise havoc if someone tries to upgrade to GFCI; trying to figure out why the breaker won't stay in, or where the fault is...
@Sparky-ww5re9 ай бұрын
@@ragtowne I've seen a substantially more dangerous hack job while helping my stepfather rewire his 1973 rambler. Aluminum wiring throughout, 70 amp Zinsco panel in a bedroom closet, as can be expected in a home built during that period. The thing that tipped us off was seeing 2 wire 12 gauge landscape lighting wire used to power the 4500 watt 40 gallon electric water heater, dad turned off the main so I could cut the wire so it could be removed and replaced with a proper 10-2 NM and a 2 pole 30 amp toggle switch since the unit wasn't within sight of the panel. I got a loud bang and vaporized about a half inch hole in my side cutters, turns out a previous owner had tapped that landscape light wire on the line side of the main, so that wire which ran in the crawlspace for almost the length of the house had no overload or short circuit protection, other than the primary fuse on the pole. The 3 way switches in the hallway were wired with feed at the light, and 12/2 Aluminum NM was dropped from the light box one to each 3 way switch, metal boxes. They were using the black as the common, and the white and ground as the travellers, with the bare "ground" traveller resting against the metal switch boxes . Since the old galvanized iron water lines were to be replaced with pex pipe anyways, we stripped the house down to the studs and started over from scratch. That was would have been in 2005 and being 16 at the time, found it very educational and rewarding. Sadly that feeling of satisfaction came to a screeching halt when we lost the house to foreclosure in late 2007 because Dad had taken out an adjustable rate mortgage when he brought the place in early 2005 and was unable to afford the mortgage once the introductory APR ended.
@paulholmes6728 ай бұрын
@@Sparky-ww5re Moved into our 1945 house with mostly BN wire throughout. Had a problem with the lights dead in the Master Bedroom the first night (we viewed the house twice, in the daytime AND the inspector we paid for never checked the lights and plugs!?!). Took a look in the attic and found the BN cable powering the MB leg had cracked at a bend and bare wires broken through the rubber insulation had parted. Decided rewiring was required. Have gone through about 80 percent of the house and replace all with NM and UF so far, to 2017 code (bought the house in 2015). Added back all the grounds, etc. Still need to replace the switch CB's with AFCI's but that's a big ticket item for a retiree, and with new, copper throughout, not that worried. To your topic, was working on a BN three wire run, to break out light power onto new NM wire, killed the circuit breaker to that light, went to cut the cable and POP, modified my cutters to have the same stripper notch you describe. :-) Found out that the Red wire was being used, not as a three way, but as a piggy back, power wire, to another part of the house on a different (30 amp) breaker. They were using the white neutral for both circuits. One more room left to finish rewiring, the Media (old living room) room, and then we'll be done. It's a shame he had lost the house, People that pushed ARM's should have been jailed or worse. Take Care!!!
@PsRohrbaugh9 ай бұрын
I was SO happy to find neutral in the light switch in my toilet room off my master bath (it's got the toilet in it's own little room). There were two single space switches in a double box there - one for light and one for fan. I was able to replace the two switches with a single-space double switch (not sure what the name is) and use the second space for a GFCI outlet. This lets me plug in a nightlight, and a phone charger. I don't use the phone charger often, but when prepping for my colonoscopy it was a lifesaver. It would also be the only way to power one of those fancy bidets if I (or a future homeowner) ever wanted one. Point being - having full power available is nice for more than home automation!
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
You are right. Have a neutral wire is the best way to go especially if you ever need to expand the circuit. Thanks for helping support the channel. 👍👍
@Dj-ve2hx9 ай бұрын
Finally, thank goodness, I have always wired like this any way,poor to the switch box first it makes for easy trouble shooting also.The first time I ever noticed a two wire to the switch box like that was when I came to the high desert and troubleshooting shooting cheap spec homes, these cheap contractors trying to save three feet of romex .
@robertsmith29569 ай бұрын
I never saw a marker for the hot line with the bare wire running in the baseboard. ahhh those were the days..... Don't have to strip the insulation off when you sell the copper.
@diverbob88 ай бұрын
In my world (mostly industrial), there were two ABSOLUTE RULES, for switch circuits. ONE, that you ALWAYS feet the top of Switching Devices and take Switch Legs from the bottom. As you showed the switch with the three conductor upgrade, the Red Switch Leg was on Top. TWO, you carry the Black as Hot all the way to the TOP of the switch and then Black Tape the White Switch Leg back to the Feed to the fixture, for what we refer to as the Light Feed method (as opposed to the Switch Feed Method). When I used to teach these things in an industrial trade school (1970s), we used a simple but descriptive method for referring to the various switch and fixture combinations. The first designation was the point where the Hot Feed was present. Example: Switch - Light, Switch - Switch - Light, Switch - Light - Switch, Light - Switch - Switch - Switch, etc. My students left knowing how to wire all of them using this terminology (they didn't need to remember which state they were in). One last point that was not mentioned. One of my vary first residential jobs was for an elderly lady who complained that she had trouble at night, turning all the appropriate light switches on and or off. I told her that I could arrange every switch so that she could just walk through the house and push every switch down. Over the years, I probably had 50 such requests from all of her friends. I never leave a job without such switch treatment. Hint: As you drew the Three way circuit (travelers - top to top and bottom to bottom, one switch would always be Up and One would always be Down when the Light is Out, hence I "X" the travelers to achieve Both Down = Off (for the elderly ladies of the world)...
@theseattlejim9 ай бұрын
One of the best explanations I've seen. Thank you
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
Thank you..
@jazzman94693 ай бұрын
Hello, great video, thank you. As a new person to wiring, I have a situation that just recently happened. I have 2 light fixtures on the outside of my detached garage that are controlled by a light switch inside the garage and/or a light switch on my kitchen wall that has a switch for the garage lights and a switch for the patio light. I am not sure which switch connection went bad but the switch in the garage is not turning on/off the garage lights anymore. Where could the problem possibly be? No, nothing has been touched in over 12 years when I had my kitchen remodeled. Thank you.
@BackyardMaine3 ай бұрын
Check to be sure your breaker isn't tripped. You may be supplying the garage with a GFCI which can trip easily. Then be sure the lights are not burned out. Check to see if power is getting through the switch in the kitchen and that its making its way to the garage switch. Connection issues are very common. Then check that power is getting through your garage switch and be sure to check to neutral so you know you haven't lost that connection either. Last would be the connections at the light.
@user-em6ie2be7x9 ай бұрын
Appreciate the video, especially learning there are new wiring codes. 👨🏿🔧
@charlescaudill26519 ай бұрын
My dining room light is wired with the dead end 3-way wiring. Which annoys me because I wanted to put a new switch that requires a neutral at the dead end location but there is no neutral there so I couldn't. I got a different dimmer switch that didn't require a neutral in the end.
@krakenwoodfloorservicemcma59759 ай бұрын
they dont even have electricity in Maine yet. Ignore this.
@Matt-my7pz3 ай бұрын
Hahaha
@OhtaniLADODGERS2 ай бұрын
😂
@picklerix6162Ай бұрын
LOL!
@nicholasgranat2999Ай бұрын
Lol
@timmathieu8918Ай бұрын
As a former Mainer I can confirm
@LTVoyager9 ай бұрын
I was waiting to see the California and Chicago methods.
@surferdude6429 ай бұрын
Dustin (Electrician U) shows them in some detail if you're interested, in his description of 3-way switch methods.
@LTVoyager9 ай бұрын
@@surferdude642 Thanks, that is an excellent video at Electrician U.
@greatnew_products74369 ай бұрын
I think the Chicago method comes with a Tommy gun😲🤔
@rossk486428 күн бұрын
Very good explanation and glad to hear about the code change which I hadn't heard about. I typically used 3 conductors plus ground cable for travelers between two 3-ways, and between 3-way and 4-way switches, because I disliked reidentification of neutral conductors.
@sjpropertyservices39879 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing.
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
My pleasure.
@jean-michelmolin61999 ай бұрын
You explained that very well. Would have liked to see the California. Do you happen to know if those two methods are code-compliant in the CEC?
@okaro65959 ай бұрын
In the standard you have two travelers. In California 3-way you have also a third wire that is always hot.
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
I'll make another video showing the Chicago and California method.
@tomg7219 ай бұрын
Thanks for the new code information and diagrams.
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
My pleasure.
@jasonwiggins56156 ай бұрын
Very good explanation. My high school teacher (back in 1997) said that was one of the things that most electricians had issues with. I made it a point to learn 3 way/4 way switch wiring like the back of my hand. Great video!
@BackyardMaine6 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing
@denk251438 ай бұрын
thank you for info on ag1 love the video also can u tell me what paint color name if you have it thank you behind you gray and beige 4:43
@BackyardMaine8 ай бұрын
Thank you! Glad you liked the video.. The paint is Valspar from Lowes. The beige is called Oregon Coast Interior Eggshell. The Gray is called Notre Dame Interior Eggshell. The colors were bought about 15 years ago so I'm not sure if they are offered by the same name today. I have leftover paint so I was able to get the colors for you. Hope this helps.
@dhelton409 ай бұрын
I'm not real keen on the NEC, which was established for electrical safety, starting to require things like this. In most cases this will never be used. I really think most people are happy to just turn the light on and off with the wall switch. In the last few years the NEC has taken the code to an extreme, requiring Ground fault protection on equipment that does not substantially need it.....Stoves, ovens, HVAC units, dishwashers and the like. These units are solidly grounded which prevents shock hazard (externally) and would/should be disconnected for service. This whole thing with the NEC smells of influence from manufactures of equipment.
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
The younger generations love controlling things with their home assistant or with their phones. The issue was that its difficult to get a neutral to the box later and its very easy and inexpensive to do it during the original installation. From a safety standpoint people were connecting the neutral to the ground wire. It would work but create a hazard by having current flow on the ground.
@spudth9 ай бұрын
NFPA owns NEC. I was a career firefighter for 23 years. During that time I purchased 4 fire apparatus, fire hose and other items for our department. During that time I learned how NFPA has a seat at the table for manufacturers. They are continually trying to create mandatory short term lives for equipment and the list goes on and on. Luckily in the fire service the AHJ is given the final word, with the NEC many jurisdictions blindly adopt it and the enforcement parties are often thise who have spent Weeks and Weeks (haha) training (as opposed to retired Journeyman electricians)
@kc9scott9 ай бұрын
@@spudth Re: short-term lives. Now that I'm old enough to have bought electronic equipment and have it later fail due to age, I agree that code shouldn't be requiring any devices with an expected lifespan less than 60 years. IMO that should mean no devices that contain electrolytic capacitors or flash/EPROM memory.
@barrythomas5299 ай бұрын
I never used a little bit of black tape taped all white with black tape or permanent black marker.
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
That's going to be whatever the local AHJ is looking for because the code isn't specific.@@barrythomas529
@sheepfeederАй бұрын
Great video! I'm a senior citizen AAS Elect/Mech, NICET III Fire/Burg. Not an electrician. Recently built a new home, I replaced the switches in the 3 bath rooms exhaust fans with switches with timer built-in, boy was I glad to find neutrals in each of the switch boxes. I know enough about house wiring to be cautious, refer to NEC and to subscribe to and watch videos like yours. Thank you.
@BackyardMaineАй бұрын
That's awesome Donald.. Thanks for watching my content.
@y2kmadd8 ай бұрын
I hate not having a neutral wire. This is long overdue.
@lxramirez97882 ай бұрын
It was never needed. Only the Hot wire. And the job was very essie.
@christianheidt5733Ай бұрын
@@lxramirez9788 It's much easier to run power to switch, then you always have power at the switch box. & It's easy, not essie
@earlgriffith35929 ай бұрын
Good description. Where are the California and Chicago methods? Would like to know what they are.
@robm30639 ай бұрын
Well I'm a retired IBEW local 701 from the west suburbs of Chicago. I can tell what the Chicago method is. We pipe all homes with EMT and pull wire. The very large outfit I worked for (20 years) had a system. Black,red ,blue hots. white ,gray neutrals Purple and gray for load side GFI. Switches yellow light s-leg first option to use, orange would be s-leg for outlet first option to use.Bath fan would always be yellow light orange fan. Travelers first option would be brown after that you could use 2 purples ,2 oranges 2 yellows. Sometimes in a large home with a 4 or 6 gang main switch we would have all kinds of pairings. Way easier to splice a piped house in my opinion as I've also been in rope homes. Trimming out a piped house is way way easier because of wire color for identifying. my 2 cents
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
I'll make a video showing those methods as well. Keep an eye out for it on my channel.
@RobertCunningham-pf9tg3 ай бұрын
The NEC code book has been hijacked by the big electrical component manufacturers. It's actually a flagrant, takeover of a once strictly, human safety and industry standards publication. I've been in the business over 40 years and had a longtime friend in the code writing industry in NC. He knew all players and how it changed over the years. He was a very smart man, may he rest in peace. Just my two cents for the day.
@thardyryll3 ай бұрын
Yours is the most incisive comment on any code-related video on You Tube. It is blatantly obvious that code updates are driven solely by the industry’s greed. Code requirements have cost homeowners billions of dollars over the years. If the industry can find a way to charge $100 for a circuit breaker that was $10 a few years ago it will, all under the guise of “safety” when in fact the risks are more theoretical than real. Proof is in the fact that millions of homes built under decades old codes are doing just fine. Careful and proper practices and decent quality products from the 1990s - plus instruction in basic electrical safety for consumers - were all we needed. Instead, we open our wallets wider with every code update.
@Matt-my7pz3 ай бұрын
What are you guys smokin? It's technology that drives this. I have had situations where I couldn't use switches requiring neutrals. I hear your point but there is a lot more going on that encourages code changes. Smart switches, unless your Ted Kazinski and friends, are awesome for so many reasons. Having neutrals at all boxes although is a pain in the ass is nice for adding a receptacle later on and being able to use and switch from the hardware store/ wholesalers.
@Matt-my7pz3 ай бұрын
It's technology that drives this new code I have had situations where I couldn't use switches requiring neutrals . I hear the point of the complainers, but there is a lot more going on that encourages code changes. I used to think the same about tamper proof/ tamper resistant receptacles until I saw my young kid poking at a receptacle the first time. Smart switches, unless your Ted Kazinski and friends, are awesome for so many reasons. Having neutrals at all boxes although is a pain in the ass is nice for adding a receptacle later on and being able to use and switch from the hardware store/ wholesalers.
@pld89932 ай бұрын
There are certainly a handful examples of industry driven changes in the NEC, but your statement that the NEC has been hijacked and taken over is just false. If you understood the NEC revision process you'd have a better understanding of changes and how they make their way into the newest edition, thereby allowing you to make an informed opinion instead of a reactionary one.
@RDEnduro2 ай бұрын
I see this recently in efforts to make it harder and more expensive to install electric car charger in home garage.
@aaron749 ай бұрын
Very clearly explained! Thanks. I think up in Canada, their CEC requires neutral at all 3- and 4-way locations, I don't think they've carved out an exception like the NEC has.
@KjKase9 ай бұрын
I prefer it that way anyways. Then you still have a neutral @ all the switch boxes incase you ever need/want a switch that needs it there.
@dmitripogosian50848 ай бұрын
@@KjKase It is obviously more versatile. The question is whether one's old house is wired this way ....
@HenryLoenwind8 ай бұрын
@@KjKase Without changing where the wiring goes, you'll never need it. Only one of the switches will have the relay that switches the load; this frees up the travellers to feed live and neutral to all other boxes to power the "send command only" smart switches.
@KjKase8 ай бұрын
@@HenryLoenwind What if I want switches that light up at night?
@KjKase8 ай бұрын
@@dmitripogosian5084 I know mine isn't... It sucks, but I'm not going to rip out the drywall to do it the way I'd prefer lol.
@JoeJ-82829 ай бұрын
As an electrician myself, I was already familiar with those two methods of wiring those switches, but I wish you had ALSO shown the other two methods you mentioned, even the now illegal one, because that way I could identify them and (hopefully) be able to fix them if needed! I also know of another way of wiring those switches, kind of combining the switch loop of the single pole you showed, with the "dead end" 3-way circuit you showed, however, since that method ALSO doesn't allow for a neutral in the switch boxes, (UNLESS you use a 3-wire between the light fixture box and the first switch box), so I'm not sure if that method is legal now either, with thenew 2023 code... I guessI need to read up on that!
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
I will make another video on the other two methods. Stay tuned. I know the method you're talking about. It's rare but I have seen it. Usually done when someone wanted to add a couple of 3-ways to control a light that was originally on a single pole. I'll add that as well.
@Stevenj120volts9 ай бұрын
Great video but you missed one code. NEC 200.7(c)1 says when a white in a cable assembly is re-identified it must be used as the SUPPLY to the switch and NOT the return
@stevebabiak69979 ай бұрын
Makes sense, it will always be “hot” if the breaker is energized. (I am not a “sparky”.)
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
Maybe I should have said that. I did do that in the video. The reason is because it could be confusing for some if we wire our light with two white wires.
@roxyviews76446 ай бұрын
Lutron writing the codes, that's new....not.
@OpenCarryUSMC4 ай бұрын
Yep. Codes being written not to safety but to adding crap
@ProjectGnome19614 ай бұрын
@@OpenCarryUSMCjust wait to hear about how we have to use pop up outlets in islands now because kids were getting hurt. It definitely has nothing to do with those outlets costing $60-$500 a piece. It’s like gfcis in wet locations; if you’re worried about people being electrocuted by standing in water make all surfaces on electric devices and appliances in wet locations nonconductive. Unless you’re really special the only path to ground in a kitchen that the average homeowner is going to come to contact with are conductive surfaces on their appliances or the metal plate screws. So why is that not required but in the 2024 code cycle I now I have to gfci protect fridges, microwaves and stoves? Oh yeah money. If I’m purchasing a minimum of 9 gfcis per house and they have a 1 in 8 failure rate according to Mike Holt then I have to replace at least 1 per house. But wait if they all have to be afgfci besides the bath and weather proof they’re getting a minimum of $362.14 per job not including replacement. Isn’t it funny how a 100 pack of nonconductive plate screws only costs $21 and miraculously is not required by code in wet locations? Surely the people who write code care more about our lives and less about robbing us blind
@678friedbed4 ай бұрын
@@OpenCarryUSMC code has never been about safety, it it was they would guarantee the safety if it was.
@678friedbed4 ай бұрын
@@ProjectGnome1961 lol don't take a bath with your toaster or poke stuff into an outlet.
@OpenCarryUSMC4 ай бұрын
@@678friedbed hey, when I was 5 years old my electronics project kit had me build a radio and then for an antenna I was instructed to plug a blade terminated wire into “the long slot” of a two or three prong electrical outlet. Yeah, that was 1966, I survived but can you imagine trying to get that past the liability lawyers at a major electronics kit and components company today? God forbid Johnny files down the blade so it will go into the short slot and the company ends up in front of a jury. Darwin just isn’t allowed to work any more.
@JOndo-yr4gm4 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video. I’m a retired active duty then AF civil service electrician. I miss code update classes since retiring and am getting ready to wire an auxiliary building on my property and this is good to hear. Though Im going to use conduit and will be able to fish a wire to anywhere if needed I’m just going to put it in from the start. Makes me wonder what other changes I may be ignorant about. Thanks again.
@BackyardMaine4 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing! And thanks for your service. 🇺🇸 I was thinking maybe do a 2-3 minute code change video each week or so but I haven't decided if people will be interested in that or not. I was in the AF a long time ago back in the 80s. I was in CE and was stationed at McClellan AFB in Sacramento CA. The base only had about 4000 military but there were about 25,000 civil service employees at the time. I had some great teachers there.
@JOndo-yr4gm4 ай бұрын
@@BackyardMaine Well thank you for your service as well. Your generation of AF electricians and Civilians are who gave me the best foundation a young electrician could ask for. I cross trained into the electrical field in 85 and my first base was Wright Patterson. It was the same make up as you described mostly civilian. I would definitely be interested in your code updates if you should decide to do them. You wouldn’t have to go in great detail and I think most people like me would understand them if they were simply a gloss over changes. Whatever you decide thank you for sharing what you do share.
@BackyardMaine4 ай бұрын
@@JOndo-yr4gm Thanks for your input my friend. I may try 3 or 4 of them and see how well they perform.
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
Go to drinkag1.com/backyardmaine to get your FREE welcome kit that includes the canister, shaker, a year supply of vitamin d3k2, and 5 extra travel packs of AG1! Thanks to AG1 for sponsoring today’s video!
@kevint19109 ай бұрын
wow you almost made it a full 60 seconds before screwing this up. First it was NEVER legal to reflag any conductor less than #6 under the code period. Second white is not nor ever has been the designation of "neutrals" white has always had the designation "grounded current carrier" and had a specific exception for this application therefor no reflagging of the white conductor in this configuration was implied or proper even if the wire were #6 (you only ever mark some other color TO white NEVER white to something else EVER PERIOD don't do it it is a mistake. The same is true for green and the section on marking is VERY detailed and exact in this regard with shall and must playing a large part in the descriptions and circumstances listed) As to the change? it is moot to me , my experience is that wiremen have been feeding at the switch or even home running from such boxes for 50 years or more as simply good practice and rarely if ever used switch loops and only in closets and crawl spaces where the use of powered devices is uncommon...also this change does not solve the grandfathered installations none of which are required to be upgraded to meet this code so the problem still exists and will always exist in some capacity.
@mostthoughtprovoking9 ай бұрын
But are you being paid by this product to promote it? Be aware of the legal troubles Dave Ramsey is in for not letting his many followers that trust him to promote products know that he is also paid by the companies that are being promoted. Just a helpful tip as you are very helpful to us here in video land!
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
Thanks.. I have to be careful. I'm covered by the paid promotion text at the top of the video screen and of course I have to say that this video is sponsored by whom ever is paying me to promote a product. @@mostthoughtprovoking
@4bSix86f618 ай бұрын
Why would people run a switch loop when power can be feed from the switch itself?
@jimertzman66288 ай бұрын
For dead end, why can't you run an additional 12-2 between SW1 & SW2? Tlhis would give you the needed black hot and cap the whites should a neutral ever be needed in SW2 or code change required.
@charleshennings51343 ай бұрын
EXCELLENT diagram for the 3-way switch setups -- this helped so much! Thank you
@BackyardMaine3 ай бұрын
Glad it helped! Thanks for watching.
@tommy2u8 ай бұрын
As in all of life's changes, it is meant to cost you more money so they can make more money.
@sircampbell12496 ай бұрын
BINGO !
@anthonykaiser9745 ай бұрын
If it's to do with NEC/NFPA/OSHA things affecting life safety, it either means something bad happened and this the cure, or they identified the potential for something bad happening and incorporated it into code because enough people thought it made sense. It's not like they're making you go back and change stuff made to earlier codes unless it's a renovation.
@nickm91235 ай бұрын
No, it's ment specifically to prevent people from using the ground as a neutral for smart switches. Ever been whacked on a neutral under load? It hurts more than getting whacked by 277. Ask me how I know.
@not2tired6 ай бұрын
Great video, as always. Clear explanations with just the right amount of "why." Also, good job keeping the grey techniques (e.g., California method) in separate videos from the green stuff so people passing through trying to work on their first switching project won't accidentally misremember or happenstance skip into the "what not to do" portions of videos.
@BackyardMaine6 ай бұрын
What a great comment.. Thank you. When I read comments like yours it motivates me to make more videos. I actually have another video of a not "very common method" for wiring 3-way switches going live this evening. I call it the double dead end 3-way because both switches are dead ended. Thanks again.
@randyscrafts85758 ай бұрын
Just ignore those pesky codes and do it the fail safe old school way. Forget inspections, they cost money and you were doing this job yourself to save money in the first place. 😁
@shoo71307 ай бұрын
Noooooooooo!
@robertthomas42597 ай бұрын
LMAO 🤣🤣🤣
@Jmb4267 ай бұрын
Okay Ron Swanson... 😅😂
@Roofer04207 ай бұрын
Inspections are free. Fuck you talking about?
@greghiggins37537 ай бұрын
So with that advice should we call you when the insurance company won’t cover the damages ??
@mj6256 ай бұрын
Probably the most thorough explanation on this topic. Well done!
@BackyardMaine6 ай бұрын
Thank you..
@jojojordan55578 ай бұрын
So basically, because some people want the "smart" switches, everyone's life just got more miserable and more expensive. wow, what a progress!
@BackyardMaine8 ай бұрын
It only applies to new construction and only once your state adapts the 2023 code. The issue has been that in the absence of a neutral wire people connect to the ground wire creating a safety hazard. I always wire with the neutral in the switch box anyway so for many people of us it's a non issue.
@Dwayne_Bearup8 ай бұрын
From my experience, the only people whose lives will be made miserable by this change are people who run their hot conductor to the fixture instead of to the switch. But in my experience of having never actually encountered that type of wiring I have to say this rule change won't affect that many people.
@austinfincher55368 ай бұрын
Shits helpful I just I installed a bathroom fan that had a light and speaker and the switch wanted that white wire
@GuldandMilla8 ай бұрын
Like 10 minutes and 10 bucks more chill
@smartwerker8 ай бұрын
@@Dwayne_Bearupdoes that matter with A/C electric. The circuit you mentioned would just keep the light powered on, no?
@walterdockins8475Ай бұрын
Great explanation! I'm replacing a light switch in my bathroom and ran across some questionable wiring. Two wires on one screw on the fan switch with one of them going to the light switch.
@outofcontrol44999 ай бұрын
Why in 2024 are we running all this expensive Romex to wall switches? Why hasn't the industry gone to low voltage communicating switches and just taking power to outlets and fixtures? Material cost would go down, labor would go down, and flexibility would go through the roof.
@Krankie_V8 ай бұрын
Maybe because it allows more options for future upgrades. For example if needing to add an electrical outlet or other powered device, hot neutral and ground could be obtained from a switch box if nothing else in the area is available. Reason 2 simplicity and reliability of not using relays/contactors when a single pole switch could be used. I realize those aren't super strong arguments but since when does the NEC use solid reasoning for everything
@Blackcreekstudios8 ай бұрын
That is what I am doing on my current project . Centralized power conversion to low voltage . And running LV wire to all switches and lights which include communications.
@twylanaythias8 ай бұрын
Switches are incredibly durable and, being inside a junction box within a wall, rarely need replacement. In the event one does need to be replaced, you need to kill the breaker. (Depending on local codes, this can be a massive pain.) Light fixtures are (usually) fully exposed - not only are they more vulnerable to damage, but also frequently changed for aesthetic reasons. This is in addition to using fragile bulbs which need regular replacement and sometimes break in a manner which exposes live voltage. This is why live voltage is run only to switches and outlets - NOT to fixtures. When the switch is turned off, there is ZERO voltage going to the fixture(s).
@guri2568 ай бұрын
@@twylanaythiasWhat? Would you please explain how it’s a major pain to turn off the breaker to a light in a home with modern wiring?
@twylanaythias8 ай бұрын
@@guri256 With rare exceptions (like most kitchens), each breaker controls an entire room. Clocks, TVs, computers, and everything else in the room running on AC is going down/out when you turn off the breaker. Assuming, of course, that you flip the right breaker the first time - breakers are commonly mislabeled, assuming that they're even labeled in the first place. Even if you live by yourself (no kids to complain about not being able to play video games, partner to be upset about not being able to use their computer, all of them complaining because the internet is off, etc), it can be a real hassle to get everything back up and running, clocks reset, etc. Add to this the operating assumption that nothing ever goes 100% as planned (particularly when it involves working on someone else's work), you can see how quickly a 'simple repair' can turn into a massive headache.
@truesimplicityАй бұрын
John that was an elegantly clear and concise lesson 👍🏼👍🏼 super understandable for both the DIY''R and PRO.
@BackyardMaineАй бұрын
Great to hear.. Thank you so much.
@jamescole31529 ай бұрын
It seems the electrical code is not about safety but politics. The new switches may need a neutral so this is about money, not safety.
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
It actually is about safety. If you have a neutral wire you won’t connect the neutral wire on the switch to ground creating a hazard. Similar to requiring receptacles every 12 feet to keep people from using extension cords. It’s about safe and adequate insulations for the consumer and nothing else.
@rogerroger77349 ай бұрын
It’s all about the money jamescole$ just like arc fault breakers.
@leif901-58 ай бұрын
Go to electrical school if you want to know, it's about saftey. Needing a neutral is not only for saftey but also allows for future switches that may be installed.
@parkerjwill8 ай бұрын
@@leif901-5 it’s about money, control, and power. Nothing to do with actual safety for people. Who do you think profits from wifi connected smart light switches? Not regular people.
@raymondmcgee44918 ай бұрын
This is absolutely about SAFETY. It is more evident in commercial settings, where the color of conductors can be a factor and upgrades to facilities (i.e. added devices/ loads) require better more than just what was standard decades ago. This will also save homeowners thousands of $ because they won't have to demo finished material just to add a few devices. Just because someone benefits monetarily from a change doesn't mean that the change was for money.
@robertcochran71032 ай бұрын
This is a most impressive video. I really appreciate your whiteboarding the circuits and explaining them.
@BackyardMaine2 ай бұрын
Glad it was helpful! Thanks for your comment and for watching my videos.
@espressomatic9 ай бұрын
Holy christ, a light switch should never have been wired at the end of a run. not today, not 50 years ago.
@Brewsy929 ай бұрын
Seriously. I'm an amateur, just learning to diy electrical, and I think switch loops are ridiculous. Just ripped out a couple switch loops and replaced with 2023 NEC code compliant wiring, without even knowing the new code, because Duh???
@sdkee9 ай бұрын
So if the breaker panel is on the north side of a room and the switch is on the south side to control a light on the north side of the room, you want me to run two different 12/2 cables all the way across the room? Sorry, that is silly. You just run a dead end, and usually I would wire it with 12/3 just in case I wanted the neutral there for some later rework. This change to the code just makes this previous nice to have a requirement.
@timothydixon25459 ай бұрын
I just don’t understand why you just don’t run a 3 wire to the switch and you have the neutral wire in the box if you need it and you are only running one cable
@tactileslut9 ай бұрын
As @sdkee said, this can require many feet of extra wire in the current carrying path. It also puts an extra splice in the load's neutral and ground connections. For some switched loads this might drop too much voltage or waste too much power. For all, it adds copper cost.
@othername10009 ай бұрын
I think part of the issue these days is that copper costs about the same as a crack habit.
@alexdavis_845 ай бұрын
This is very useful information. It took me a hot minute to figure it all out but I appreciate it . Cheers!
@ysfoz56849 ай бұрын
@7:29 why would you run 12/2 to the switch? wouldn't 14/2 be more than enough?
@JoeFeser9 ай бұрын
That seems crazy unless you are running massive grow lights. I had the same question. I rewired last year and no circuit uses more than 30 watts and yet most is 14/3 and some is 12/2
@jaycahow46679 ай бұрын
I do not think it is required as 14/2 is mainly used on lighting. In fact because of the lower power demand of LED lighting they are now coming out with 10 AMP breakers that uses lighter cheaper 16/2 wiring. I can see no reason to spend the extra money for 12/2 especially on LED lights.
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
4/2 if fine if on a 15A circuit breaker. I didn't want to say 14/2 and have someone connect that to a 20A circuit.
@johnypitman23689 ай бұрын
the only thing i thought he might have explained is that additional 4 ways can be added endlessly. all in all a lesson I would give the teacher a A+ for.
@djcip19 ай бұрын
Kudos, very clear and concise explanation! However, I don’t understand the comment regarding some inspectors and size.
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
200.7 in the code does allow the re-identifying of a white wire for single pole, 3-way and 4-way light switch loops but I have found some inspectors will not allow this so I never do it.
@djcip19 ай бұрын
@@BackyardMaine Do they ever give you a Code based reason? It drives me crazy when inspectors enforce personal rules and not strict adherence to the NEC!
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
There's another area of the code that prohibits re-identifying smaller conductors. I think it's smaller than 8AWG.. I'd have to look it up. I prefer wiring methods where I don't need to do this anyway so for me its not a concern. @@djcip1
@ecospider59 ай бұрын
There was a dead end 3 way on my stairs. I was planning on putting a wifi switch at the bottom of the stairs. When I opened the box there was no neutral. So the wifi switch was put upstairs. I always wondered if that was code compliant. Good to see that it is.
@Michael-o3r7k3 ай бұрын
AG1 got the best teacher ever,YOU ARE AWESOME BABY
@ronh56239 ай бұрын
Good video. I always identify wire going to light with colored tape, indicating load.
@DonTruman9 ай бұрын
Good video. I'm a former electrician/contractor. Good to learn the new rule. Given this, and the cost of wire these days, I'm wondering if relay switching is becoming more popular for basic residential installations. I.e., no exotic control systems, just basic residential. Seems it might have an edge in the current market.
@Daryl37379 ай бұрын
Excellent description of how to properly wire a 3-way switch! Thank you!
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
Glad it was helpful! Thanks for watching
@martyscncgarage52759 ай бұрын
On dead end 3 way's I would use the Red and White for travelers and use the black for the switch (lighting load) leg. Thanks for sharing the code update
@ianmacdonalad86048 ай бұрын
I do the same. Hopefully a little less confusing for the next guy
@N719SM4 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video! ALWAYS IDENTIFY THE SWITCHLEG DURING THE INSTALLATION! It's easy to figure out the hot wires, but the biggest challenge in trouble shooting several hot wires in a box is trying to figure out which wire is the switch leg. Identification can be whatever: some guys wrap the switch leg around the travelers in a 3-way circuit, some guys use a paint pen, while others use tape. In commercial jobs the switch leg is often a different color wire. The point is the there is some sort of ID on the wire the is not like the others!
@pld89933 ай бұрын
The switch leg is always connected to the common terminal on a 3-way, just looking at the switch is all you need to do. The switch leg is almost never a different color because local AHJs usually have a color code established for all ungrounded conductors.
@Mike-012343 ай бұрын
@@pld8993 I was wondering why he said at the end of the video that inspectors would be good with using a white wire re-identified going to the bulb from switch #2 wouldn't that be a black wire. The only white wire in this diagram would be the light bulbs neutral connection back to the outlet power source on the top left of his diagram.
@pld89933 ай бұрын
@@Mike-01234 He said that because using a re-identified white to be used as a switch leg is a violation; it can only be used to feed power to a switch, not from the switch to the load.
@N719SM2 ай бұрын
@@pld8993 I guess I was referring to more of a commercial/industrial setting. In others words-no NM cable
@smarthome26609 ай бұрын
A very good presentation, thanks. I always forget how to wire 3 way switches no matter how many I do, if I don't do these often enough. My lights are completely different in that my switch boxes carry no current at all. Mine have no hot, no neutral & no ground. They have two bell wires in them that lead to the grey terminals of Sonoff Mini R2 smart WiFi controllers. These terminals only sense a change in ground of the logic chip, and still utilizes the traditional wall light switch to control the light. Lights can be controlled via the app, voice, wall switch, routines and timers. This method will not allow dimmers to function. I have one lamp in each room with dimming function that is smart. I chose this option due to the high cost of wire, having a huge 19 room - 90 year old home. Not only did I not have a neutral, had cloth wire, and I didn't even have a ground.
@AgentOrange969 ай бұрын
I'm very curious about what the California 3-way is but also way too afraid to Google it. And I don't even *want* to know what the Buckfield 3-way entails. Also, I had never heard of the dead-end method, and at first I was wondering why it'd be useful. However, I actually want to install a 2nd switch for one of my existing lights. This would be the best way to do so, so I'll probably do that. (Or at least facilitate the ability to use it that way if I or a future home-owner were to go back to non-smart switches.)
@mikecumbo75319 ай бұрын
Google it. Actually google “California three way switch”.
@okaro65959 ай бұрын
In California 3-way you pass an always hot wire in addition to the normal travelers between the switches. Well the easiest would be to use a smart switch. No new wiring would be needed. With a kinetic switch one would not even need to worry about a battery.
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
I'll make another video.
@steveh87249 ай бұрын
This was a GREAT explanation of 3-way and 4-way switch connection options! I've watched other videos, but you narration and whiteboard illustrations were crisp, clear, and easy to follow! Will be coming back to this video when it's time to put in LED dimmers to replace our multiple position kitchen lighting. I looked at the current wiring before and could not figure out what was going on. I think with printouts of your diagrams I'll finally be able to decipher what's going on and whether this older (1995) construction provides a neutral somewhere for the newer LED dimmers.
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@leonardhenderson67233 ай бұрын
Nice. I am retired from the AF, was in the Ext Electrical shop as a power line technician
@BackyardMaine3 ай бұрын
Very cool! Thanks for your service. I was only in four years back in the 80s. McClellan AFB Sacramento CA. (CE Prime Beef) 🇺🇸
@JohnDlugosz9 ай бұрын
For the dead-end 3-way, you install a smart switch in the Leg as follows: use two conductors of the traveler to send power/neutral to the leg's j-box. Use this to power the smart switch. The third conductor in the traveler goes from the leg's smart slave switch to the "slave" input of the smart switch in the line location. Leave a note and diagram in the j-box for the confused electrician who comes along years after you're gone. Problem is, the smart switches stopped having the "slave" wire on many of the models. I don't recall if there are more expensive models, but you can just forget the 3-way and use a X-10 switch that commands the first one; similarly for newer command systems. That means running the power/neutral to it but not using the 3rd wire.
@robertkerby25819 ай бұрын
Wow, a super informative video on the proper wiring electrical switches! As a handyman, I am both surprised and a little terrified by this change at and in the NEC Code! Do you have a visual representation that I can access online or otherwise? Well done, Sir!
@stevebabiak69979 ай бұрын
Just take a screenshot from the video for the diagram you think you need.
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
Thank you.. I'm going to build some guides in the near future. Stay tuned.
@johndavies29499 ай бұрын
As a handyman you probably aren't licensed as an electrician. You may be allowed to change out switches and receptacles and be compliant with licenseing laws, but once you start adding circuits and more receptacles and switches and other outlets you should be licensed.
@johnparkhurst8259 ай бұрын
Well explained and illustrated. 👍 Why did you point out twice, 12/2 wire?
@BackyardMaine9 ай бұрын
Thank you.. You can use 14/2 as well if you have a 15A lighting circuit.
@johnparkhurst8259 ай бұрын
@@BackyardMaine I guess I'm a bit confused about branch circuits. Hint: video idea perhaps?
@abidnego59748 ай бұрын
i used to do a bit of this at my last plant before i moved to a new automotive plant but havent done much in the last 4-5 years. i always ran my power to the switch first probably because i worked with ladder logic more so than this general receptacle/outlet/switch wiring so it just seemed smartest to run my power to the switch before anything else
@BackyardMaine8 ай бұрын
Ahh yes ladder logic. I have worked with that for decades. Mostly AB PLCs.
@truthsayers87258 ай бұрын
Yep. AB slc 500 through the latest RSLogix (which just confuses me)
@BackyardMaine8 ай бұрын
@@truthsayers8725 Before I left we upgrade our RODI water plant for SLC 500 to RSLogic. It was a nightmare because the plant runs 24x7 We bring everything over in little pieces and TIs risk tolerance for an unexpected shutdown was 0%.
@todsnyder95098 ай бұрын
Can you do a video on how you fold a duplex outlet back into box after wiring. Starting with wire length and which way to bend. I always struggle with getting everything to go in nice.
@BackyardMaine8 ай бұрын
Yes I can. I actually have that on my Idea list. Stay turned..
@danielgeng23065 ай бұрын
I’ve always sent the feed to the switch box first when wiring in NMB, AC or MC, so this code change isn’t much of a trauma to me. I think they should’ve modified the exception to allow a switch feed loop in conduit though. Great explanation!
@hmj.seward20155 ай бұрын
I think I got it. I need to remove a 3 way switch and was hoping this would help me suss it out. I'll start by figuring out which set of the wires is the lead and which is the leg.
@ralphbuschman81418 ай бұрын
Love the video description for 3 way wiring.I wonder why there was no mention of how 4 way swiches as having " in " and " out " on the back? I understood they were there for a purpose purpose?
@BackyardMaine8 ай бұрын
I should have mentioned that.. My apologies.
@hammockkingАй бұрын
Thank you for such a clear and concise description of all these. If I’m going with the dead end method, and one of my switches is a dimmer, does it matter which switch location I install the dimmer in?
@BackyardMaineАй бұрын
It depends on the dimmer switch. Some will have a neutral connection and allow you to dim LED lights without flickering. Others will not have a neutral. If your dimmer does have a neutral you will need to install in the box with a neutral conductor. If not it won't matter.
@stuartkorte16425 ай бұрын
To be clear, if your circuit is panel to light to dead end switch, you will use 12-3 between light and switch? Glad I found your channel yesterday. Clearly explained and always references code. Thanks
@BackyardMaine5 ай бұрын
Thank you. You will run 12 gauge wire if the circuit feeding the lights is 20A or in other words has a 20A breaker. If the circuit is 15A then 14 gauge wire is fine.
@sethtaylor59383 ай бұрын
In the dead end three way, if you needed a neutral for any reason in the last switch, you could run an NM 14/4 which has Black, Red, blue white and ground. Expensive stuff if you don't need it that much but u could run 14/4 between the switches to bring in the neutral. It would also save re-identifying the white wire. Again, not required, but an option. In a job site where there's 120/208 there may be some of that NM or MC cable around. In conduit, easy peasy to run a blue wire.
@locovidepro8 ай бұрын
Thank you John for this amazing video explaining the different forms of connecting the 3-way light switch.
@BackyardMaine8 ай бұрын
My pleasure.. Thank you for watching.
@MrCubflyer3 ай бұрын
Ive always done my wiring the way you do witih the neutral in the switch box.
@davidsmith36238 ай бұрын
I have always tied the neutrals together in all my switches and used the std. wiring method in all the 3 and 4 way switches. Done it that way for over thirty years. I never like the loop methods. Nice to know I was doing it correctly.
@MrShaneSunshineАй бұрын
This seems to be an easier 3-way to plan than the one i organised for me and the Mrs last the weekend!
@morgansword9 ай бұрын
For me, as old as I am, never going to ever wire anything again. Its just nice to remind ones self what was involved. For people who worried about their homes..... I say if it was done in say the last five years and no issues, no need to worry but if there are problems going on, time to revisit all of the wiring. Any wiring thats twenty plus would probably fail but yet if it is still working right. Its a leave it alone as the cost of rewiring a home that old will be not only very expensive, most likely be more than that home is valued at. There of course many other things to consider as age or historic, etc., that determines to do or not. Just trying to keep this comment short... loved this video as its very easy to follow
@AppalachiaThunder6 ай бұрын
I've always done dead end 3 ways by sending the line to switch 2 and using the common on switch 1 for the switch leg.