Is There Such Thing as a 3-Way Switch Loop? What's the Difference Between a 3-Way and a Switch Loop?

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Electrician U

Electrician U

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 440
@danieldryden542
@danieldryden542 Жыл бұрын
As a 30 year vet of electrical work, It is always feed down on the white and up on the black! The reason is that when you see a white tied to a black in the ceiling you know its a down feed to the switch and the black remains a known hot that is hooked up on the device. Down on the white Up on the black!
@ericgold3840
@ericgold3840 8 ай бұрын
Yep. NEC 200.7 makes it a requirement. I'm a newb apprentice so I can't say for how long this has been in the NEC although it is *really* common to find wires of whatever color used for whatever. It's a wild west out there. First time I've caught an error in a Dustin video. ;)
@pld8993
@pld8993 7 ай бұрын
@@ericgold3840 200.7 also requires that the white be reidentified to a hot color. Not allowed to leave it white anymore.
@larrytoler3266
@larrytoler3266 6 ай бұрын
I agree, besides the code says you can't use the white for a switch leg, It has to be the constant hot if used on a switch
@majorintherepublick5862
@majorintherepublick5862 6 ай бұрын
You as an electrician identify each wire at their termination points with tape or other means
@JimMenzie
@JimMenzie 3 ай бұрын
😊😊p
@8fivezero
@8fivezero Жыл бұрын
Never have I ever heard this explained so elequently. As a handyman I ran into this working on my aunt's 70's townhouse when I updated the three way kitchen switches. I fumbled with this for 2 hours until I called an electrician to help. It took him about a half hour until he figured out the hot was in the light fixture and was able to wire it properly. Now I understand that this was a three way switch loop.
@fes988
@fes988 Жыл бұрын
Dustin, another great video except..... 200.7(C)(1) "If used for single-pole, 3-way or 4-way switch loops, the reidentified conductor with white or gray insulation or three continuous white or gray stripes shall be used only for the supply to the switch, but not as a return conductor from the switch to the outlet." from the NEC copyright NFPA. I love you videos and even use some of them in my 4th year apprentice class. Keep up the great work.
@NipkowDisk
@NipkowDisk Жыл бұрын
That one almost bit me (NEC 200.7(C)(1)) last week when I was installing a stairwell light controlled by 3-way switches. Sure glad I looked it up, otherwise there is no doubt I would have used the re-identified white wire as a return!
@matthewfarwell5539
@matthewfarwell5539 Жыл бұрын
Sir, I have to tell you (from someone who never comments) that I really appreciate your teaching methods. Very straight forward, never condescending. You can teach to complete inexperienced and seasoned electricians alike. As someone who teaches and also is electrician, I must give you credit for this great work. Thank you for delivering content that actually empowers and encourages others.
@mikejohnson3873
@mikejohnson3873 Жыл бұрын
I LOVE this content. This dude teaches the basic fundamentals of electricity better than most seasoned electricians can! I wish more people taught it like this. I feel it would definitely help apprentices better understand and therefore, engage more with the trade and to be better workers.
@John_Doe-007
@John_Doe-007 Жыл бұрын
Well that's exactly what I'm doing here. Lol
@dallasarnold8615
@dallasarnold8615 Жыл бұрын
I am a retired handyman. Love your videos. On several occasions I came across three way circuits functioning wrong. Flip one switch and the light works. Go to the second switch and nothing happens. Flip the first one back light goes out, go to the second and light comes on. Return to the first switch and nothing happens. I eventually would find the right way to change the wiring to fix it, but perhaps you might do a video showing what is going on for others here.
@lucavalentino2863
@lucavalentino2863 Жыл бұрын
I own a 1872 house in the Boondocks that had two major add-ons done, one in the 70s and one in the 80s. After weeks of watching KZbin videos on three-way switches, you are the first to explain what I found in the boxes-only three wires in each box! All the wiring in this house has that level of craziness and nothing matches today’s instructions or code books. Sometimes, I feel that I am living in a mousetrap, even though everything works. So, thank you for your excellent explanation. Retired now, I was a vocational instructor and very much appreciate the clarity of your presentation.
@rickdefalco1676
@rickdefalco1676 Жыл бұрын
Hey Dustin so I’m an old electrician I did my apprenticeship in New York and Connecticut in the late 80 and early 90 and we did tons of those and dead end 3-ways and we never reidenified the neutral and I never got called out on it because it was just the normal way to do it. Now I mark everything how times change. Your a great teacher wish there were guys like you back then it would have moved our craft way further faster keep up the great work and don’t get burned out.
@linbrat8275
@linbrat8275 3 ай бұрын
You were probably the one who wired my home in NYC 1995! 🤨🥰LOL
@qapla
@qapla Жыл бұрын
Many older homes used lights with a pull-chain for the light, thus the habit of running power to the light. Then when they started using switches, they just ran the loop to the switch, often called a "dog-leg". Today, it is common to run the hot to the switch location and "loop" the light.
@Sparky-ww5re
@Sparky-ww5re Жыл бұрын
I remember reading somewhere, that back in the 1890s - very early 1900s, the few homes that were electrified would often have combination gas/electric light fixtures as the electric grids were sort of unreliable, and it was thought that electricity was a fad.... better keep the gas flowing, and usually consisted of a pendant light in the middle of a room, with a turn key switch, mimicking turning on a gas light fixture, when electrical appliances first appeared you would unscrew a bulb, then power your toaster or flatiron, etc from the lamp socket, early appliances often had a screw shell attachment plug on its cord. If an appliance cord had a pronged plug you screw an adapter into the socket, then insert the plug (base and cap) Some old timers still use the term plug cap or cord cap.
@Sylvan_dB
@Sylvan_dB Жыл бұрын
@@Sparky-ww5re In some places they fished wires thru the old gas plumbing. This is why lamp sockets and so many other things use standard 1/8" pipe threads. A switch on the socket reduced the complexity of the retrofit.
@Sparky-ww5re
@Sparky-ww5re Жыл бұрын
@@Sylvan_dB interesting, never heard of running wires through gas pipes, only heard of running wires alongside gas pipes, when homes has a combination of gas and electric lighting. that explains why metal conduit like Rigid Metal Conduit has couplings and threaded fittings very much like black iron piping. Ironically I have worked with metal conduit a couple of times , as well as working with black iron pipe adding a gas line for a range during a remodel project so a dual fuel range could be used, and became curious as to why the threaded fittings seem very similar, but never thought to do further research
@markc2643
@markc2643 Жыл бұрын
My house was built in 1960. It has the power running to the switches, and a 12/3 running up to the lamp box with an always hot red wire presumably for ceiling fans to allow the fan to keep running even when you turn the light switch off. I have 4 ceiling fans configured that way.
@Lhostel
@Lhostel Жыл бұрын
I have a special situation 😊 maybe you can help. I’m in an old duplex with old wiring. They converted it from fuses to a breaker panel (hybrid) Any way….. 2 lighted single pole switches one at the top of the stairs one at the bottom to control the hallway light. There are only two wires, white and black. How do i get 3 way function out of this horrific setup? I haven’t attempted to locate the hot supply yet. I’m willing to bet it’s coming in from the ceiling as described in the video. I hate how they ran electrical back then
@mattcrowley1076
@mattcrowley1076 Жыл бұрын
I REALLY struggled with reidentification of wires, and 3ways/4ways in general, cant express enough how much I appreciate you clarifying this stuff!!
@linbrat8275
@linbrat8275 3 ай бұрын
My house was built in 1995 in NYC! It has been a nightmare trying to upgrade to a smart home! Every switch in my home has used the white neutral as a hot, even in three ways. The switch loop that Dustin explained is exactly my scenario. Please do a video showing some fixes. I have invested so much money in smart fixtures just to have them sitting around with no solution. Dustin you are the only one I trust to show me the proper way to remedy this Mess.
@tylerrobinson5340
@tylerrobinson5340 Жыл бұрын
This is exactly the issue I have with my house made in 1972, I have been beating my head against the wall trying to find out what was going on with my wiring. Now I know it's a 3 way switch loop. Thank you!
@keithbockmon3264
@keithbockmon3264 Жыл бұрын
I once owned a house that had a 3-way switch loop, and I never could quite understand what was going on. Your drawing and explanation cleared that up. Thanks for the education!
@blakek1043
@blakek1043 Жыл бұрын
I use to get zapped alot by this but yea great explanation.
@dumbeezy5480
@dumbeezy5480 Жыл бұрын
That’ll be $3000, sir. Cash or credit?
@SkilasSkilasGaming
@SkilasSkilasGaming Жыл бұрын
Thanks dude, I'm a beginner and just 21 years old so having access to videos like this is awesome.
@andrewmarcinko1796
@andrewmarcinko1796 Жыл бұрын
I’ve come across this twice in California and both times I figured it out thru process of elimination. But you made it clear how the current travels. So thank you for being so informative.
@bilbo75
@bilbo75 28 күн бұрын
Thank you for this! Could not figure out how a three way was working until I watched your portion on a 3 way switch loop! No relabeling of the neutrals as hot. Now I know why it works and can label it properly for future work
@staffs964
@staffs964 8 ай бұрын
Outstanding buddy I spent nearly a full weekend trying to fit new 3-way switches for the Mrs. Of course it was a perfect storm!... I'm Brit! now in Canada, we do it differently, just a DIY bloke, the house is almost a hundred years old with 70s wiring, no re-identification marks, and guess what, it was a 3-way, switch loop! Your video of the 3WSL was the only one I stumbled across, not knowing what to search for! I was at least gratified to hear you say that your electrician was confused. Magic, her switches now work. Thanks
@wkdavistx
@wkdavistx Жыл бұрын
You have a way of explaining things that makes it so easy to understand. 3-way switching is a complex concept to most people, but it really is simple.
@RandomAxeOfKindness
@RandomAxeOfKindness Жыл бұрын
The switch loop explanation is awesome. Years ago, we rented a 1950s house that had a garage breezeway light that could be switched on or off from any of FIVE different switches -- garage, kitchen, porch, downstairs hall, and upstairs hall. We wanted to open the walls to see how the hell it was wired. Now I'm beginning to see how it might've been done.
@danlux4954
@danlux4954 Жыл бұрын
Wouldn’t it be a 4 way switch?
@tburrelliv
@tburrelliv 5 ай бұрын
I am not an electrician, but a long time electrical DIYer. I have two comments: 1. I am old enough that I think the "3-way switch loop" was the way I was originally taught how to do 3-way switches! 2. This was, by far, the best white board (non-hands-on) explanation of 3-way switches I have ever seen. The only thing I would tweak is for the 3-way switch loop, the drawing might lead someone to believe that the "travelers" all connect to the light fixture when they do not. For clarity I would draw those outside the light electrical symbol since they connect (like you said) by wire nutting them together in the box. The only wires in the electrical box that connect to the light fixture are the relabeled common (white wire with black electrical tape usually) connecting to the hot side of the light fixture and the actual common connecting to the common side of the light.
@warrensaltzman5195
@warrensaltzman5195 5 ай бұрын
Very well done. Had a very old house and while I had no idea what it was called... I was putting in all those switch loops everywhere as I went around and replace the pull strings with wall switches (2 and 3 way). Good to know I did it correctly ... wasn't so sure at the time!
@kendenning3920
@kendenning3920 Жыл бұрын
My Uncles house has a 3 way switch loop like this. It never worked correctly. One of the switches went bad so I switched it out for him and noticed it wasn’t working correctly. Told me it was always like that. I couldn’t leave it like that lol. Took some time but I figured it out. He was happy after 30 years it was finally working correctly haha.
@treyhart6861
@treyhart6861 Жыл бұрын
I love how you explained all this, but I would love for you to blow everyone's minds and diagram out a FOUR-WAY switch for when someone wants three, four, five, ten switches for one light!
@EzRay11
@EzRay11 Жыл бұрын
Hey Dustin, Effin Awesome! I’m not an electrician. This is without a doubt the best electrical instruction channel on KZbin. That white board along with your style of teaching explains these circuits in simple easy to understand terms. Thanks for all you do.
@keything8487
@keything8487 Жыл бұрын
whats scary is john q home owner trying to do, redo these type joints, and hurting themselves, or others......or even causing a fire.
@EzRay11
@EzRay11 Жыл бұрын
@@keything8487 Hey Key, John Q here. I may not be an electrician but I do take it very seriously. I have been doing my own and friends home electrical stuff for over 30 years. Admittedly have done my share of head scratching over the years. And yes, I also admit I must have had some luck. Having said that, there’s no shortage of John Q’s like me out there, and videos like this can only inform and help those of us that are not trained electricians, gain a better understanding of what is required and how to do it safely. I wish I had access to information like this back then.
@keything8487
@keything8487 Жыл бұрын
@@EzRay11 i understand, i have seen first hand too many home/store owners get in over their heads (quickly).....and it never turns out well......for educational purposes, i like the video, im just afraid it ight empower some folks (hold my beer types) to bite off more than can be "chewed"....nothing personal against you.....not everyman/woman is capable.
@helmanfrow
@helmanfrow Жыл бұрын
Hey, Dustin, very good video. You keep getting better at explaining these concepts. The digital whiteboard is a big step up. A tiny bit of constructive feedback, if I may: Even though I already thoroughly understand this material it was a little confusing to me, as a "visual learner", to follow the drawings at times. Use a coil in a circle to represent a lightbulb. The architectural symbol with its four protruding wire-looking things is unnecessarily busy. It took me a second to realize that the light fixture is supposed to be in the ceiling box and not in a different location. Consider using a light grey as a background or outline color to define the boundaries between different locations or areas. Finally, When possible redraw the conductors on the side they're entering an outlet rather than drawing in 'hops'. This will help declutter the image.
@jopo6388
@jopo6388 Жыл бұрын
I've occasionaly come across this in older homes here in NY and leaves a much more crowded ceiling box. If you already had it wired with a single pole switch loop it is much easier to add a 3 way by simply running a 3 wire from the existing single pole switch to the new 3 way. Its still a switch loop running through the added 3 way and changing the single pole to a 3 way. Much cleaner and in fact can be made into 4 way, 5way etc by daisy chaining additional switches with additional 3 wire.
@JohnThomas-lq5qp
@JohnThomas-lq5qp Жыл бұрын
In my 50 plus years as a sparky never heard of a 5 way. You can have two to whatever you need 4 way switches wired between two 3 way switches. Had a gadget nut that we had to install outdoor flood lights from 5 locations in his big house. Best location was right next to his bed slightly higher then top of end table so he could turn on luminares without getting out of bed. Had to add a fancy timer, photo cell and a 4 position switch to select what he wanted to control Linares. Fourth position was bypass to keep bulbs lite while replacing them.
@DrD6452
@DrD6452 Жыл бұрын
Before I started watching your channel anything electrical scared me so I never dared touch it and this stems back to a bad shock I got when I was 20. Now I do my own electrical (simple residential in my own places only) and licensed electricians say they like my attention to detail. You're an awesome teacher and this video is an awesome troubleshooting and explanatory video.
@Welding_Handyman
@Welding_Handyman 8 ай бұрын
Before this awesome explanation, I wired up the lights and the outlets accidentally to turn on and off together. But obviously, the outlets need to stay on at all times, and the switch is only supposed to turn on the light. Excellent explanation.
@kevinbloomquist2637
@kevinbloomquist2637 Жыл бұрын
This is another way of doing the same thing in a retrofit. Lets say a switch loop already exists and you have 12/2 in the switch box. It is possible to just run a 12/3 from the existing switch box (b1) to a new switch box (b2). Black from 12/2 is connected to common terminal of 3-way in b1. Black and red from 12/3, between the two switched, are attached to the travelers. White from 12/3 (re-identified) connects common terminal of 3-way in b2 to white from 12/2. Please note all whites are re-identified in both boxes. The only benefit for this method is there are less connections in the fixture box which are usually over crowded to begin with. However this does require b1 to be large enough to support the extra 12/3 wire.
@kevinbloomquist2637
@kevinbloomquist2637 Жыл бұрын
Dustin, the way you explain 3-way, switch loops, and 3-way switch loops, shows how great you are as a teacher. Thank you.
@bowmanjeff8
@bowmanjeff8 Жыл бұрын
I completely agree
@Sparky-ww5re
@Sparky-ww5re 8 ай бұрын
Yes, what you described is known as a dead end three way. Wired my share of these in the past during renovations. While keeping in mind that as of 2011, a neutral shall be available in the switch boxs to facilitate future installation of electronic switching devices that require standby power, one of the exceptions to this requirement is with 3 and 4 way switching such that the lighting is visible from the single or combined switch locations, a neutral shall be required at one switch location. All that being said, depending on the jurisdiction, you might not be able to legally add a three way switch to an existing single pole with a 2 wire switch loop, and some inspectors are stricter than the NEC and require neutrals at all locations regardless. So be mindful of that.
@Whereswalter1
@Whereswalter1 Жыл бұрын
I must say you have an elegant way of teaching people and it is absolutely outstanding. I did not learn anything from watching your video I knew all this already but was just Amaze how well you are able to explain this to somebody who doesn't know. Kudos to you for your teaching abilities.
@pouraty
@pouraty Ай бұрын
This explained everything I had questions regarding 3-way. Well Done. Thank you.
@Russianmafia10
@Russianmafia10 Жыл бұрын
Another switch loop is if you need to add a switch to an existing one switch circuit with the hot in the switch box, is where you change the switch to a 3 way, then run one 14/3 wire to your second switch, and have the white return to the original switch box, and connect the original leg to the light to the white return from the second switch
@Sparky-ww5re
@Sparky-ww5re Жыл бұрын
I've always called this a dead end three way. you can also do the same thing with a single pole switch loop.
@randomcuriosities8441
@randomcuriosities8441 Жыл бұрын
Yep done that plenty of times
@tonywagner4836
@tonywagner4836 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the explanation. Under 2020 (I think-may have been earlier) switch boxes are required to have a neutral ot be able to be retrofitted with a neutral without cutting finished material. Just something to watch out for.
@Sparky-ww5re
@Sparky-ww5re Жыл бұрын
based on research this was in 2011. there are certain exceptions, one being three and four way switches, if the lighting layout is such the the lighted area is visible from all switch locations, a neutral shall be required at one of the locations. Meaning you can legally wire a dead end three way, or wire power to the first three way, then to the light, then a 14/3 from the light to the second location, and still meet code. Keep in mind that the AHJ may be more stringent than the NEC and require a neutral at every switch box.
@tonywagner4836
@tonywagner4836 Жыл бұрын
@@Sparky-ww5re Thank you for the code clarification.
@davidsoulsby1102
@davidsoulsby1102 Жыл бұрын
@@Sparky-ww5re From the UK. why do they stipulate a neutral in a lighting switch box please? its not used 🤷‍♀
@Sparky-ww5re
@Sparky-ww5re Жыл бұрын
@@davidsoulsby1102 great question, glad you asked! The reason for the neutral in the switch box requirement, is because nowadays, there are many types of switches that require a neutral to function. For example, certain dimmer switches, particularly Magnetic Low Volt and Electronic Low Volt when used with certain LED drivers, timeclock switches and Wi-Fi smart switches that connect to your home Wi-Fi for the purposes of home automation, all require a neutral to work. In older homes, say built before 2000, but especially in the 60s and 70s, it was common to find switch boxes without a neutral available, since electronic switchs did not yet exist, and a neutral was never needed, and in certain wiring layouts it used less material and/or labor to wire power to a light fixture, then drop a 14-2 or a pair of 14/3's down and give the switch the number of wires needed. later on it was found that homeowners wanting to bring their home up to the 21st century, would begin adding switches that need a neutral, but because there was not a neutral available, would use the ground as a neutral, putting unwanted current on the equipment grounding conductor. Hope this explanation helps.
@AlwaysBeSmart674
@AlwaysBeSmart674 9 ай бұрын
Cool you included the 3 way switch loop on my 3rd year of being an electrician had a switch issue in my house and it was wired this took me a min to figured out what was going on. House was built in the 70s and built by an electrician so all kinds of crazy shit going on.
@JCWren
@JCWren Жыл бұрын
I've got several 3-way switch loops on my property (1985 house and out buildings). As I understand it, these don't meet code for new work because they don't provide a neutral for a smart switch. And that's exactly what I want to do, but without that neutral (or really violating code by using the ground as neutral for the smart switch :) ), I can't replace them. And to make matters worse, these are in areas that aren't accessible unless I start cutting holes in the ceiling.
@JohnThomas-lq5qp
@JohnThomas-lq5qp Жыл бұрын
You seldom have to bring such things up to present codes unless performing major renovations. Hopefully you still can purchase devices that utilize the ground wire for probably less then a milliamp of power. We were told at an IAEI continuing education class that one of the reasons for requiring a white grounded conductor ( no such thing in NEC anymore as a neutral ) was that in cases where people had a lot of them feed from a GFCI the slight imbalance between the hot black conductor & the white wire would exceed the 4 to 6 milliamps needed to trip a GFCI. If switches are in open basements or in conduit then a white wire is not necessary because it's easy to install one in the future.
@jefferylebowski7355
@jefferylebowski7355 Жыл бұрын
You mentioned the remote control 3 way devices in the beginning. I recently used one of those and realized that the wired unit draws power all the time to sense the remote switch. If it is wired as a switch loop, this will result in the light receiving a very small amount of current, even when off. For an LED fixture, this results in a small amount of light. The 2020 requirement of having neutral in the switch box solves this, and now I "get it".
@ranger178
@ranger178 Жыл бұрын
i have that problem with a motion sensor light switch light glows when in sensor mode but is off if you turn selector to off
@LogenNineFingers43
@LogenNineFingers43 Жыл бұрын
Actually you are a bit mistaken. That issue is not due to it being a switch loop. Because regardless the switch is hooked into a Hot and a Switch Leg. What's actually happening is that your light doesn't provide enough Load/resistance for the switch. The electronic switches actually NEED a load to function. Because to keep the electronics running inside, It needs a complete circuit. Using the light as a path to neutral But there is a minimum load of about 15-30 watts I believe If it is below that, the switch functions, but the resistance of the light isn't high enough to eat up that stray voltage coming through from the switch Some switches have a Neutral wire or terminal to alleviate this issue. But another solution is to A: install higher load lights or more of them. Or B: lutron makes a little minimum load capacitor that you wire in either at the switch or in the fixture box to the switch Leg and Neutral, and it supplies a little load of it's own to take care of that stray voltage
@heroknaderi
@heroknaderi Жыл бұрын
I really enjoyed this one i have done a single pole switch loop before but not a 3 way one this showed how it;s done I really appricciat it.
@bowmanjeff8
@bowmanjeff8 Жыл бұрын
I had this same setup. I was simply trying to replace a light fixture. I noted extra wires in the ceiling box. I knew that it I simply disconnected the wires from the fixture and reconnected the same to new fixture all would work. And it did. However I drew a simply diagram to understand more as I knew that the fixture was controlled by two three way switches. After shutting off the power I did continuity tests to determine which wire was going where. And the two three ways were in gang boxes with others 3 ways for different fixtures. I did not hang the new fixture until I understood the flow. And I kept the diagram I drew so I would understand in the future if I changed out the fixture again. Side note: switch loops are a great example of why you should always turn the circuit off at the breaker. Turning off the switch would not stop the fixture box from being hot. I’m a diy homeowner. So I try to research as much as possible. And draw pictures and think before touching anything in a dangerous manner. Thanks for an excellent video.
@dracula3811
@dracula3811 Жыл бұрын
On the switch loops, i see the white being tied to the hot more frequently and the black being used as the switch leg.
@lupefernandez6332
@lupefernandez6332 Жыл бұрын
I appreciate your work. I have been having problems with my lights since I bought the house. The wires were connected wrong in the same manner as your demonstration. Got it fixed.
@bsmith8564
@bsmith8564 Жыл бұрын
As an old (retired) electrician I find your videos good learning tools, only one critique. On your single pull ceiling fed drawing you should have fed the switch with the white wire not the black, We did not mark wires in the old days. Even though you indicate (with tape) the wire as a current carrying conductor if you open a box and see a black-white connection you know. Also in knob and tube houses it was common to switch the grounded conductor (neutral) which can cause pain for young electricians who rely on turning the switch off to change a light fixture.
@TheForgottenMan270
@TheForgottenMan270 Жыл бұрын
I have dealt with many switch loops and 3-way switch loops, but never knew what they were called. Now I know.
@jeepsaround
@jeepsaround Жыл бұрын
Utah small 50s-60s homes with basements, with about 1600-2000sf total, used switch loops, running first to the single light box, then separate wires, one to the four receptacles, and one to the light switch. For small 11ftx11ft rooms with one ceiling light this makes sense in order to isolate each room to one circuit. I completely re-wired the house in order to add a bigger service panel, get a main circuit breaker, add ground wires, and add more circuits. The tight layout of the house and all the load bearing walls made the most sense to keep most of the rooms the same size. It also seemed to make sense to keep the circuits in this loop to isolate each room to one circuit. The two larger rooms and kitchen were wired conventionally. Not everyone has a fancy new large home 3000sf+ and 1960 isn't that old. I kind of chuckle thinking that code (and electrician advertsising carring most about taking your money) makes it sound as if an original 1960s home will burn up or kill you at any moment and that the older fabric insulated NM copper wire is surely rotted, leaking, and arcing. All of mine was was just fine, likely less of an issue in Utah's dry climate.
@SpencerNuxoll
@SpencerNuxoll 11 ай бұрын
This is great information and expertly delivered. Thank you so much. I liked and subscribed even though this is the only video I needed to see. I'm in the boondocks with a 1970s house. Near impossible to get an electrician out here. I've all but broken my brain on what the heck was going on until I saw this and realized what I had was a bunch of 3-Way Switch Loops!! Didn't even know that was a thing! Thank you so much. All problems solved =D
@PERFECT-ly7li
@PERFECT-ly7li Жыл бұрын
Here in Belize that is the method used to distribute power to light switches and receptacles. The source comes from outlet boxes on the ceiling then to everything else. Nice video!
@bradvols
@bradvols 9 ай бұрын
I so needed this video re-wiring my 1953 house and was having a hard time wrapping my brain around things not being in switch boxes
@joshuawilson1989
@joshuawilson1989 Жыл бұрын
Im a visual learner i love how you draw it out and explain im a hands on and the way you teach is 👍..
@samjohnson5770
@samjohnson5770 Жыл бұрын
Man I use you back early years as a electrician in THE 70'S The first time I ran into a 3 way switch loop I was working on the house that was wire in knob and tubing long story short I figure out what going on You did good job explaining how a 3 way switch loop works Yes in today their many historical home that still wire in knob and tubbing
@plandl1
@plandl1 8 ай бұрын
Last year I came across an interesting loop. I didn't know it was a loop at the time. Situation: hallway, three single switches (one on each end and one in the middle). Someone decided to upgrade the switches and instead of replacing the old yellow 3-way switches with new white ones, they installed 3 single-gang switches. I had conductors on the grounds!!. This mess had wires connected together that shouldn't have been and some capped off and yet no breakers were tripping. So I removed the switches, pulled all the wires out and identified them with continuity checks. So it was actually a 4-way loop. It took a couple of days to wrap my head around it, since the power came in from the light fixture in the middle of the hallway but I finally got it all working. Man, what a learning opportunity!!!
@josephgobster
@josephgobster 7 ай бұрын
You are a great teacher. Thank you for making these videos. This was def the answer i was looking for.
@johnburnitin1027
@johnburnitin1027 Жыл бұрын
I did a 3 way loop on my house, when I built it. The main reason I did that was because the wiring was getting pretty busy in the walls. Took a little head scratching to figure it out, since I have never done one of those before but it worked out great.
@SerenoOunce
@SerenoOunce 7 ай бұрын
When working in older homes with fiber insulated wires and plastered walls these switch loops are very common. Many original fixtures only had a switch on the device itself. Lucky to see a actual wall switch to have been added at all over the course of their many renovations.
@bassman5066
@bassman5066 Жыл бұрын
I cannot express how helpful this video was. I just purchased a home built in 1900 and the entire home is wired with switch loops and even some 3 way ones. I am working on replacing the remaining knob and tube from the third floor down (adding a sub panel up there) and now that I have a better understanding of 3 ways I think I can get more loads off the old wiring than I had planned. I have 3 floors and each of those has a 3 way hall light that spans both floors with a 3 switch panel on the second floor that can control all 3 of those lights. That 3 switch panel (and almost every other switch in the house...) is ONLY hot wires and I have yet find where it is fed from, so I am now wondering if I can break that circuit up more by feeding at least one of the 3 ways from the other end. Thank you!
@CarlosSanchez-qw5eb
@CarlosSanchez-qw5eb Жыл бұрын
How are you doing DUSTIN, I just wanted to thank you for your excellent teaching and great talent that you possess to explain step by step how to resolve the problem and to identify the problem THANKS FOR YOUR GREAT PATIENCE, QUEENS NEW YORK SAY HELLO 👋......THANKS AGAIN
@Ikantspell4
@Ikantspell4 Жыл бұрын
My tips. 1)Remember the rules are different now than in the past. You will have a neutral and ground to new switch boxes but It wasn't always that way. 2)3 ways are easy- travelers connect to each other- the ends go to either power or the device. 3) make sure te box can hold all them wires and connectors. If I see a shallow box with 7 wires in it I'm going to cry. 4) always Identity hot or potentially hot wires. For my sanity I have the handy tapes of all colors at the ready. 5)never trust existing wires were properly identified and/or as you're expecting. You get an instant fault and or a nice zap if you're careless. 6) confused where a wire goes? Just do a continuity test using extra wire or invest in a signaling system. Sometimes guessing ain't worth it and testing is faster.
@ninehundreddollarluxuryyac5958
@ninehundreddollarluxuryyac5958 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for this. My house was built in the 60's when they sent copper to Vietnam and put aluminum wire in houses. I wanted to put in a socket, assuming I could get a hot wire from the switch. The result was lights flickering when using the socket. Now I know It was the hot just run down from the ceiling powering the vacuum through the lightbulb.
@Huiando
@Huiando Жыл бұрын
Outstanding content! Thank you so much. You just saved me from wasting hours of guessing a wiring in an old house.
@layz_her2673
@layz_her2673 Жыл бұрын
Ty for this. So informative, I’m gonna show this to my workers
@grahamvaneck8906
@grahamvaneck8906 Жыл бұрын
I'm not sure what the NEC says on the subject, but in the Canadian Electrical Code it says if you use "premanufactured cables" (NMD, BX, whatever) for switch loops, you have to use white as your "unswitched conductor" (aka, hot) and black as your switch leg. Also, in 2018 it was added that any switch for lights had to have a neutral present in the box (even if it's not being used, it's for if somebody wants to add a dimmer later that requires a neutral), so now you have to use 3-conductor instead of 2 for switch loops. I haven't seen or heard of a 3-way switch loop so far yet in my short career in electrical, but it's good knowledge to have for sure. I love these theory videos and learn a lot from them, thanks Dustin!
@bahbarino4479
@bahbarino4479 Жыл бұрын
👏🏻 truly clearly understood, avoiding the 😵‍💫…everyone not in the know, should keep this video for reference not if, but when you stumble onto this in your work adventures.
@Sparky-ww5re
@Sparky-ww5re Жыл бұрын
you think a 3 way switch loop is confusing? It could be worse. I am in the process of finishing up a renovation on a ranch home built in 1952, in Anderson County South Carolina. the three way switches in the hallways are wired with 14/2 cloth covered ungrounded romex from a receptacle, hot and neutral in the switch box are pigtailed and connected to the travellers, then jumps to the next 3 way connected the same way, then jumps to another receptacle to complete the circuit. a single conductor with black rubberized insulation, ran from the common in each switch box to the light. So you are switching the polarity of the socket to turn the bulb on or off. A hot and neutral, light is on. Two neutrals or two hots and the light is off. Old houses are fun to figure out lol
@raymond3722
@raymond3722 Жыл бұрын
Great illustrations D. You always explain with clarity.
@w1swh1
@w1swh1 Жыл бұрын
Very informative. As a friend once said to me " its very intuitive when you know how" 😀
@felipea1844
@felipea1844 Жыл бұрын
As a future Electrician Helper ... I thank you for this video.
@SomeRandomOldGuy
@SomeRandomOldGuy Жыл бұрын
Thank you. Best explanation of a 3 way switch ever. I think I finally get it.
@stegra5960
@stegra5960 Жыл бұрын
In the UK we use the loop system as standard. Well, we did until recently when the need for a neutral at the switch became the norm. For the 3 way (we call it 2 way) it's possible to connect the constant and switched lives to the two switched terminals of one switch and then run a 3 core (+earth) cable directly from that switch to the other switch with one conductor connecting the two commons together and the other two connecting to a switched terminal each in either switch. Sleaving must be used to reidentify conductors but cable with two browns (live/live) is common.
@tpurves2006
@tpurves2006 Жыл бұрын
Great content, downside is if you want “lighted” switches, or if you want to replace them with “automation” computer controlled switches. But again great style and presentation of content.
@Flapswgm
@Flapswgm Жыл бұрын
You are a VERY good instructor.
@WiliamBennettwildarbennett
@WiliamBennettwildarbennett Жыл бұрын
Ok 1 other keynote of interest is back in the 60'&70's it was a common practice to send the White Neutral as the switch side and Black as the Switch Leg. Thus leaving the Line in HOT in the ceiling. And trying to figure out a 3way switch loop with that can be very dangerous! Speaking from experience! Here's a tip that I do I take an extension cord, !!!BREAKER or FUSE OFF 1st !!! Then check continuity on ALL OF THE WIRES AND LABEL THEM 🏷 And then isolate the switch side and the travelers. This has saved me from getting popped several times.
@seanpouyamehr6677
@seanpouyamehr6677 Жыл бұрын
The apprenticeship school I went to called it "wiring a 3-way with power at the source". The load J-box being the source of the hot wire for the switch.
@keithhults8986
@keithhults8986 Жыл бұрын
During my career, I electrified many 200+yr old historical registry homes. I have worked on switched feed&neutral 3ways, and converted countless switched neutral 3 ways During my years. My 98yr old home has switched feed&neutral 3&4way switching. You might not see much if any of what am pointing out, down in Texas. We use #14 cable with residential lighting in NY.
@mikekennedy3173
@mikekennedy3173 Жыл бұрын
Great video. My son has the same 12 /2 wiring in his house no grid. Had no idea when I installed new dimmer when I found just white and black on the line and load side of the single pole??? Switch loop?? Excellent lesson
@timothysears6970
@timothysears6970 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for a clear explanation of this!
@randallthomas5207
@randallthomas5207 Жыл бұрын
A few years back we came across a five way switch loop, that a renter had replaced one of the switches in. I took a full day to figure it out and get it wired so it worked. We had to find an easel with a 3X4-foot pad of paper on it, set it in the room we were trying to figure out, and diagram the whole mess before we figured it out.
@MicahFunk
@MicahFunk Жыл бұрын
Drawing out a schematic really helps put things into perspective. Did you disconnect all the switches and the light to track down what went where?
@morty5085
@morty5085 Жыл бұрын
As an American living in the UK working as an electrical design engineer(I'm the guy you hate haha) , switch lives is mostly what I'd used here. However I tend to work on large commercial projects and they tend to use ELV switching instead. Great videos!
@frankmarques8292
@frankmarques8292 Жыл бұрын
Great video was having a hard time trying to understand how to hook up a 3 way WIFI switch with no nutral wire in both boxs, THANKS TO THIS VIDEO I now know whats in my two 3 way box switches for the basement lights , back in the day someone used two 14/3 wires in each switch box the colours are black, red, white, whey used red & white as travlers, the 14/2 power wires are in a junction box in the closet ceiling, the hot black is together with the 14/3 black on the upstairs switch, the black wire in the basment switch box is the load wire to the light wire, and the 14/2 white nutral wire in the junction box is together with the white wire for the lights . Hope this makes any sence, unfortunetly i was not able to hook up the 3 way WIFI switch because of no nutral wire, i did hook up a Leviton DSL06 dimmer switch, But the switch has a low humming sound coming from it, lights turn on and off, and dimmer works fine, Just dont know why the low humming from switch ?
@davidsoulsby1102
@davidsoulsby1102 Жыл бұрын
Very interesting how different places have different ideas. I'm in the UK, the switch loop as described here is how is how it's always (rare exceptions) done, a ring from the fusebox to the first light then looped to next then the next etc until the last goes back to the fusebox. At each light a 2 core cable (twin and earth) goes down to a switch with the red (live or hot) to the common connection and the black (neutral) to the sw1 connection and marked with red tape, at the light box/chamber the red is connected to live incoming ring and the black with red tape is connected to the fitting live connection. All neutrals are bunched together. What is being called 3 way on the video is what we call 2 way and instead of having wires from the light to each switch we have 1 to the first sw then from there a 3 core cable (3 core and earth) goes to the second switch. Hard to describe but think of it as like the 3 way switch loop here but missing out the light fitting. 3 way switching here is where you has as described above but with an intermediate switch between switch 1 and switch 2, think of a crossover switch. You can put in as many intermediate switches as you want and just call it by how many switches are there eg 5 way 6 way..... To surmise you have a ring of light fittings, each fitting has 1 cable to a switch, then if its 2 way you just run a cable from the switch to the next switch and so on, Radials you could describe them as.
@bigguyprepper
@bigguyprepper Жыл бұрын
I have a situation where I have to do something similar with 277v ceiling lights. Thank you for making this seem so clear !
@ottoroth9377
@ottoroth9377 Жыл бұрын
In the older days a loop switch was the norm. Even today many electricians are using the loop switch method. But I have ran into the hot & neutral is ran to the switch box!
@edwardsmith7131
@edwardsmith7131 Жыл бұрын
THANK YOU very much for this video! I managed to reverse engineer / forensically deconstruct this exact setup in my PacNW house that the original long time owner had rednecked his electrical over several decades and 5+ additions and renovations. It's nice to see how it was originally intended to have been installed; it explains why his janky/kludgy repairs were done that way. I may not have even been a certified electrician but I'm not afraid of an NEC code book and have been bringing circuits up to modern safety standards as I find his installed fire hazards. Except the THREE breaker box situation with a "main" breaker panel and two mini breaker panels. The first mini breaker box was fully Zinsco parts but only the left side was used ... so they covered the punched out right with duck taped cardboard. Oh: it also may or may not have been wired in on the street side of the meter. I hired a professional (the 2nd most expensive and well recommended) to make this problem safe and legal. I can deal with science but not the law. The original owner just seemed to add copper until the lights came on.
@jthornca
@jthornca Жыл бұрын
I'd be interested in knowing how you would install "smart" or "IR Motion" 3 way switches in this the 3 way switch loop scenario. Most of the smart or motion switches on the market require a neutral wire which doesn't exist in the switch box. I discovered this, much to my dismay when installing smart switches in a home I purchased which was built back in the 80's. Excellent video as per usual. I started watching you when I embarked on this journey to update my new home. You are an great resource.
@kenbrown2808
@kenbrown2808 Жыл бұрын
in the 3 way switch loop scenario shown, you would reconnect the loop wiring - each 3 wire loop wire would revert to hot, neutral, switched. then each motion sensor switch would be hooked up like a single pole, and the both red (switched) leads would connect to the light. best to have a contactor model of motion sensing switch for that, rather than solid state, since some solid state switches don't respond well to a backfeed.
@janeeya844
@janeeya844 Жыл бұрын
My teacher said your instructions was so wrong-😭😭 but thank you, still gave me new information
@janeeya844
@janeeya844 Жыл бұрын
He said bc ur nvr supposed to have two whites to a light
@jonpt2941
@jonpt2941 Жыл бұрын
I love how you explain your video but I'm from UK and we are blue for N Red for L and copper for E
@joenguyen4092
@joenguyen4092 7 ай бұрын
Thank YOU 👍👍👍👍 This is an excellent lesson 👏👏👏👏
@Sparky-ww5re
@Sparky-ww5re Жыл бұрын
Everyone I work around called this setup a double dead end three way. Usually found in homes from the 70s and earlier. No longer code compliant because there is no neutral available at any of the switch locations.
@peto22
@peto22 Жыл бұрын
It's funny that where I live, all lighting circuits are made in "switch loop" way. Living rooms are nicest, there may be dozens of lamps that light up in many different groups, and several 3-way and 4-way lighting connections can go through the same junction box.
@1000YearHomes
@1000YearHomes Жыл бұрын
Great use of white boarding. Clear instructions. Really appreciate this channel and happy to subscribe and like.
@isaacacosta4496
@isaacacosta4496 Жыл бұрын
Im totally gonna look and see if its already a thing, but while i have it fresh in my brain i was looking for a more detailed video on the differences between transfer switch and interlock. again if youve already made then thank you in advance! good vids brother cant wait for the next
@koreykilburn5303
@koreykilburn5303 Жыл бұрын
My dad’s house was built in the 1920s in rural Central California. I big old 3000 square foot custom farm house in the Craftsman Architecture style. I’ve had to figure out and fix the mess of someone trying to replace worn out switches on a three way switch loop. You aren’t kidding when you talk about a mess. Long hallway with a switch at each end and multiple lights down the hallway. Power in the ceiling.
@heronimousbrapson863
@heronimousbrapson863 Жыл бұрын
In the '70's in British Columbia, it was against code to feed the power from the panel directly into a three-way switch box; the power had to be fed into the light box. I don't know if this is still the case.
@Lhostel
@Lhostel Жыл бұрын
Great video! Thank you for your time and energy. I love your style and appreciate your delivery. I have a special situation 😊 maybe you can help. I’m in an old duplex with old wiring. They converted it from fuses to a breaker panel (hybrid) Any way….. 2 lighted single pole switches one at the top of the stairs one at the bottom to control the hallway light. There are only two wires, white and black. How do i get 3 way function out of this horrific setup? I haven’t attempted to locate the hot supply yet. I’m willing to bet it’s coming in from the ceiling as described in the video. I hate how they ran electrical back then
@MichaelFord
@MichaelFord Жыл бұрын
same as everyone.. thanks. I knew the mechanics of them but didn't get the understanding until this video. I watched another a while back when you guys taught me that there is code for the number of wires that you can have in a box. wouldn't you break that code since normal 3-ways at the box only 3 conductors: hot, common and ground. with the 3-way switch loop you would now have 11 if you include the ground for all of them: source: common, ground, hot for each leg:(hot, common, traveler, ground)x2
@bigjon9508
@bigjon9508 Жыл бұрын
I watched 8 minutes of this video before I realized you're talking about what we call cold switching. 😆 The more you know 🤙
@keything8487
@keything8487 Жыл бұрын
i call it a reverse switch leg/3way
@philipstaite4775
@philipstaite4775 Жыл бұрын
I very much prefer the "modern" way of wiring hot through the switch to the load. I've worked on some older stuff with switch loops and the white and black wires connected together just looks so wrong... Great explanations!
@dankelley9361
@dankelley9361 Жыл бұрын
Great job identifying a somewhat confusing concept!
@randomcuriosities8441
@randomcuriosities8441 Жыл бұрын
FYI on a switch loop, the hot is always sent to the switch on the whites and then back on black that way if you see a splice with a bunch of blacks and one white you know that's the hot going to the switch. Also maybe this is a regional thing, but red and white are travelers and black on one end is power and the other is a switch leg. White travelers are almost never identified. Not trying to contradict what you're saying. While what you are saying makes sense, it's not always that way.
@hayansupakane77
@hayansupakane77 Жыл бұрын
Some regions are interpreting 22 code as saying whites can no longer be phased. So the 12/3 would always be a TTN.
@Sparky-ww5re
@Sparky-ww5re Жыл бұрын
that's how I was always taught to wire a switch loop as well. in on the white, back on black. Easy for me to remember as I'm a big AC/DC fan🙂 FYI the 3 way switch loop demonstrated in this video does not comply with the NEC as of 2011 because there's no neutral in the switch box, but nonetheless educational because you will frequently come across this configuration during renovations and remodeling projects
@samspade5648
@samspade5648 Жыл бұрын
Hahahaha, for 40 years I have only ever seen it done as Dustin has demonstrated, at least here in the midwest. It is done as best practice for remodels...but properly re-identified whites let's you figure it out quickly regardless of the wiring choice made for legs or the feed.
@samspade5648
@samspade5648 Жыл бұрын
In the Chicago metro area, you find this type of switch loops mainly in old pre 70 homes.
@randomcuriosities8441
@randomcuriosities8441 Жыл бұрын
@@samspade5648 I've been an electrician for 24 years. I spent most of my life as an electrician in the South, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, North Carolina and South Carolina. It's almost always "back on black" a term we use to describe a switch loop where 14 or 12/2 has sent hot down on white and back on black. H 2 whites going to a fixture doesn't make sense or look right. Maybe out west it's more common but in these old houses (and some buildings) in the South it's not that way. I was merely pointing it out so some apprentice doesn't think it's "always" that way. In 24 years I've learned nothing is "always". Usually maybe... I have seen lamp cords inside walls where a handy home owner did his own splices lol.
@davidgagnon2849
@davidgagnon2849 Жыл бұрын
The three-way switch loop is what I encountered in a carport. They had two three-way switches and wiring that I had never seen. I don't remember why I was having to work on it, but I ended up running new wires and connecting it the conventional way. I wish I had seen this video first. 🙂
@jerrymarasco683
@jerrymarasco683 Ай бұрын
I like your videos. This was my first three-way switch I wired. Yes a lot of ceiling wiring was used the 70s and earlier. Nowadays, as the code has changed if you decide to do this you're going to have to use one 12/3 or,14/3 and one 12/4 or, 14/4 cuz you need to have a neutral in one of the switches. Just saying.
@TheWmiller8
@TheWmiller8 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for explaining a switch loop. I have a light switch in my hallway that turns on a light in the room on the other side of the room. The switch in the room controls one side of a receptacle. I am looking to make the switch in the room control the light and the switch in the hall change to be a receptacle. And hope to make the receptacle in the room both hot all the time.
@williammorris3303
@williammorris3303 Жыл бұрын
The hardest hit I ever took came off of a white wire. It was a short to ground that sent me power off a neutral on an exterior light fixture. Since then I treat every wire as a hot
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