3-way switches no longer serving their purposeFirst time changing switches and outlets (receptacles)....

Why do airports remove/realign runways?

Possibility to correct pitch from digital versions of records with the hole not centered

Taking my Ph.D. advisor out for dinner after graduation

Interpretation of non-significant results as "trends"

Why do Martians have to wear space helmets?

How many Jimmys can fit?

Why are co-factors 4 and 8 so popular when co-factor is more than one?

Category-theoretic treatment of diffs, patches and merging?

Intern not wearing safety equipment; how could I have handled this differently?

How to understand flavors and when to use combination of them?

How can I understand if an object stay (zero velocity) or moving with constant velocity (zero acceleration)

How did the IEC decide to create kibibytes?

How to say "is going" in Russian in "this game is going to perish"

Where are the Wazirs?

Sorting a list according to some pre-specified rules

Why does the Misal rico de Cisneros uses the word "Qiſſa", and what is it supposed to mean? Why not "Miſſa" (Missa)?

Array or vector? Two dimensional array or matrix?

What are the consequences for a developed nation to not accept any refugee?

When is one 'Ready' to make Original Contributions to Mathematics?

Passwordless authentication - how and when to invalidate a login code

Users forgotting to regenerate PDF before sending it

What is the meaning of "prairie-dog" in this sentence?

What is this burst transmission sequence across the entire band?

How to have a filled pattern



3-way switches no longer serving their purpose


First time changing switches and outlets (receptacles). Anything special I should know?Why is this switch box wired like a 3-way when there's no other switch?Are these 3 switches wired correctly?Wiring a ceiling fan and light switch with two three-cable wiresReplacing a dimmer switch with regularReplaced Outlet and Switch, Now Light Won't Turn OffAdding back removed 3-way switch from 4-way setupWhat is the correct way to wire a 3 way switch where power comes into the middle switch?Installing smart switches, instructions don't match my wiring?Wiring light switches in two rooms helpLight Fixture Stopped Working After Replacing Its Three-Way Switch






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty{ margin-bottom:0;
}







3















I apologise if there is an answer to my question in one of the other multiple 3 way switch questions, but if there is I couldn't find it.



I just bought an old house, built in 1967. I'm replacing the outlets and switches (for looks; everything worked fine but was filthy, had broken ceramic, etc.) and I've run into a problem.



There are two 3-way switches (one inside the front door and one at the end of the hallway) that should control two of the outlets in the living room. There is no overhead light. There were two candle-holder looking lights mounted to the wall above the fire place that were plugged into the outlet there. These switches were used to turn the lights on and off. There is another outlet in the room that also was controlled by these.



I replaced all of the outlets and switches in the room (except the old clock outlet) and the power all works. The problem is that the outlets that should be controlled by the switches are powered all the time no matter the positions of the switches. I've tested the terminals on the switches and they are doing their job (flicking the switch transfers power) so I'm assuming the problem is in the outlet wiring, although I've been known to be wrong before.



I'm no artist but I made this diagram and wrote it all out to try to help explain:
Living Room Layout





  1. Box with 5 switches


    • 3-ea 2-way switches and 2-ea 3-way switches

    • Power feed from panel enters room here:


      • 1 black wire: split to 4-ea black wires and 1-ea white wire (which appears to be the hot, white-with-black-tape wire in 6)

      • 1 white wire: spliced to 5-ea white wires



    • Switch 1: 3-way switch.


      • This switch should control outlets 4 & 5 along with the 3-way switch at 6.

      • This is the only switch in the box that doesn't have one of the black wires from the panel attached to it

      • 1-ea red and 1-ea black traveller from 6 are connected to either side of the switch (red on right, black on left).

      • 1-ea red wire running out of the box toward 2 is connected to the black screw.



    • Switch 2: 3-way switch. This switch and another 3-way in the basement control the lights on the post in the driveway.


      • 1-ea black from the panel is connected to the black screw

      • 1-ea black and 1-ea red travellers run from the switch out of the box



    • Switches 3 - 5: 2-way switches that control different things (porch lights, etc.)


      • All 2-way switches have 1-ea black from the panel and 1-ea black travelling from each switch out of the box






  2. Duplex outlet


    • Box has 2-ea 3-wire cables (white, black, red) running in/out of it.

    • White wires are connected to the left side.

    • Black wires are spliced together then connected to the bottom right

    • Red wires are spliced together then connected to the top right




  3. Duplex outlet


    • Box has 2-ea 3-wire cables (white, black, red) running in/out of it

    • White wires are connected to the left side.

    • Black wires are spliced together then connected to the bottom right

    • Red wires are spliced together then connected to the top right




  4. Duplex outlet


    • This outlet should be controlled by the first switch in 1 and the switch at 6.

    • Box has 2-ea 3-wire cables (white, black, red) running in/out of it

    • White wires are spliced together then connected to the bottom left screw

    • Black wires are spliced together then connected to the bottom right

    • Red wires are spliced together then connected to the top right




  5. Duplex outlet


    • This outlet should be controlled by the first switch in 1 and the switch at 6.

    • White wires are connected on the left

    • Black wires are spliced together and connected to the top right

    • Red wires are spliced together and connected to the bottom right




  6. 3-way switch


    • This switch should control outlets 4 & 5 along with Switch 1 at 1.

    • 1-ea 3-wire cable running in/out of the box

    • White wire with black tape (which I'm assuming is the single white wire spliced to the rest of the black hots from the panel in 1) is connected to the black screw

    • Black wire is connected to the left screw

    • Red wire is connected to the right screw

    • I assume the red and black wires are the travellers connected to Switch 1 in 1.




  7. Duplex outlet


    • 1-ea 2-wire cable (white & black) runs into this box

    • White is connected on bottom left

    • Black is connected on bottom right




  8. Single 2-prong outlet


    • Outlet is recessed into the wall. Apparently this is what they used to do before most clocks ran on batteries.

    • I haven't opened this up...




I'm definitely missing something. Will someone please help me figure out what it is?










share|improve this question









New contributor



watson387 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • There are a few things that are often missed when people change receptacles and switches.

    – Harper
    6 hours ago











  • "the outlets are hot all the time" ! This is the most significant thing in your post. Outlets should never be hot, especially if nothing is plugged into them. Heat is a symptom of a partial short somewhere: be prepared for fire or electrocution.

    – Ray Butterworth
    2 hours ago











  • I don't mean hot to the touch I mean always powered as in the switches aren't working. I'll edit my post.

    – watson387
    1 hour ago


















3















I apologise if there is an answer to my question in one of the other multiple 3 way switch questions, but if there is I couldn't find it.



I just bought an old house, built in 1967. I'm replacing the outlets and switches (for looks; everything worked fine but was filthy, had broken ceramic, etc.) and I've run into a problem.



There are two 3-way switches (one inside the front door and one at the end of the hallway) that should control two of the outlets in the living room. There is no overhead light. There were two candle-holder looking lights mounted to the wall above the fire place that were plugged into the outlet there. These switches were used to turn the lights on and off. There is another outlet in the room that also was controlled by these.



I replaced all of the outlets and switches in the room (except the old clock outlet) and the power all works. The problem is that the outlets that should be controlled by the switches are powered all the time no matter the positions of the switches. I've tested the terminals on the switches and they are doing their job (flicking the switch transfers power) so I'm assuming the problem is in the outlet wiring, although I've been known to be wrong before.



I'm no artist but I made this diagram and wrote it all out to try to help explain:
Living Room Layout





  1. Box with 5 switches


    • 3-ea 2-way switches and 2-ea 3-way switches

    • Power feed from panel enters room here:


      • 1 black wire: split to 4-ea black wires and 1-ea white wire (which appears to be the hot, white-with-black-tape wire in 6)

      • 1 white wire: spliced to 5-ea white wires



    • Switch 1: 3-way switch.


      • This switch should control outlets 4 & 5 along with the 3-way switch at 6.

      • This is the only switch in the box that doesn't have one of the black wires from the panel attached to it

      • 1-ea red and 1-ea black traveller from 6 are connected to either side of the switch (red on right, black on left).

      • 1-ea red wire running out of the box toward 2 is connected to the black screw.



    • Switch 2: 3-way switch. This switch and another 3-way in the basement control the lights on the post in the driveway.


      • 1-ea black from the panel is connected to the black screw

      • 1-ea black and 1-ea red travellers run from the switch out of the box



    • Switches 3 - 5: 2-way switches that control different things (porch lights, etc.)


      • All 2-way switches have 1-ea black from the panel and 1-ea black travelling from each switch out of the box






  2. Duplex outlet


    • Box has 2-ea 3-wire cables (white, black, red) running in/out of it.

    • White wires are connected to the left side.

    • Black wires are spliced together then connected to the bottom right

    • Red wires are spliced together then connected to the top right




  3. Duplex outlet


    • Box has 2-ea 3-wire cables (white, black, red) running in/out of it

    • White wires are connected to the left side.

    • Black wires are spliced together then connected to the bottom right

    • Red wires are spliced together then connected to the top right




  4. Duplex outlet


    • This outlet should be controlled by the first switch in 1 and the switch at 6.

    • Box has 2-ea 3-wire cables (white, black, red) running in/out of it

    • White wires are spliced together then connected to the bottom left screw

    • Black wires are spliced together then connected to the bottom right

    • Red wires are spliced together then connected to the top right




  5. Duplex outlet


    • This outlet should be controlled by the first switch in 1 and the switch at 6.

    • White wires are connected on the left

    • Black wires are spliced together and connected to the top right

    • Red wires are spliced together and connected to the bottom right




  6. 3-way switch


    • This switch should control outlets 4 & 5 along with Switch 1 at 1.

    • 1-ea 3-wire cable running in/out of the box

    • White wire with black tape (which I'm assuming is the single white wire spliced to the rest of the black hots from the panel in 1) is connected to the black screw

    • Black wire is connected to the left screw

    • Red wire is connected to the right screw

    • I assume the red and black wires are the travellers connected to Switch 1 in 1.




  7. Duplex outlet


    • 1-ea 2-wire cable (white & black) runs into this box

    • White is connected on bottom left

    • Black is connected on bottom right




  8. Single 2-prong outlet


    • Outlet is recessed into the wall. Apparently this is what they used to do before most clocks ran on batteries.

    • I haven't opened this up...




I'm definitely missing something. Will someone please help me figure out what it is?










share|improve this question









New contributor



watson387 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • There are a few things that are often missed when people change receptacles and switches.

    – Harper
    6 hours ago











  • "the outlets are hot all the time" ! This is the most significant thing in your post. Outlets should never be hot, especially if nothing is plugged into them. Heat is a symptom of a partial short somewhere: be prepared for fire or electrocution.

    – Ray Butterworth
    2 hours ago











  • I don't mean hot to the touch I mean always powered as in the switches aren't working. I'll edit my post.

    – watson387
    1 hour ago














3












3








3








I apologise if there is an answer to my question in one of the other multiple 3 way switch questions, but if there is I couldn't find it.



I just bought an old house, built in 1967. I'm replacing the outlets and switches (for looks; everything worked fine but was filthy, had broken ceramic, etc.) and I've run into a problem.



There are two 3-way switches (one inside the front door and one at the end of the hallway) that should control two of the outlets in the living room. There is no overhead light. There were two candle-holder looking lights mounted to the wall above the fire place that were plugged into the outlet there. These switches were used to turn the lights on and off. There is another outlet in the room that also was controlled by these.



I replaced all of the outlets and switches in the room (except the old clock outlet) and the power all works. The problem is that the outlets that should be controlled by the switches are powered all the time no matter the positions of the switches. I've tested the terminals on the switches and they are doing their job (flicking the switch transfers power) so I'm assuming the problem is in the outlet wiring, although I've been known to be wrong before.



I'm no artist but I made this diagram and wrote it all out to try to help explain:
Living Room Layout





  1. Box with 5 switches


    • 3-ea 2-way switches and 2-ea 3-way switches

    • Power feed from panel enters room here:


      • 1 black wire: split to 4-ea black wires and 1-ea white wire (which appears to be the hot, white-with-black-tape wire in 6)

      • 1 white wire: spliced to 5-ea white wires



    • Switch 1: 3-way switch.


      • This switch should control outlets 4 & 5 along with the 3-way switch at 6.

      • This is the only switch in the box that doesn't have one of the black wires from the panel attached to it

      • 1-ea red and 1-ea black traveller from 6 are connected to either side of the switch (red on right, black on left).

      • 1-ea red wire running out of the box toward 2 is connected to the black screw.



    • Switch 2: 3-way switch. This switch and another 3-way in the basement control the lights on the post in the driveway.


      • 1-ea black from the panel is connected to the black screw

      • 1-ea black and 1-ea red travellers run from the switch out of the box



    • Switches 3 - 5: 2-way switches that control different things (porch lights, etc.)


      • All 2-way switches have 1-ea black from the panel and 1-ea black travelling from each switch out of the box






  2. Duplex outlet


    • Box has 2-ea 3-wire cables (white, black, red) running in/out of it.

    • White wires are connected to the left side.

    • Black wires are spliced together then connected to the bottom right

    • Red wires are spliced together then connected to the top right




  3. Duplex outlet


    • Box has 2-ea 3-wire cables (white, black, red) running in/out of it

    • White wires are connected to the left side.

    • Black wires are spliced together then connected to the bottom right

    • Red wires are spliced together then connected to the top right




  4. Duplex outlet


    • This outlet should be controlled by the first switch in 1 and the switch at 6.

    • Box has 2-ea 3-wire cables (white, black, red) running in/out of it

    • White wires are spliced together then connected to the bottom left screw

    • Black wires are spliced together then connected to the bottom right

    • Red wires are spliced together then connected to the top right




  5. Duplex outlet


    • This outlet should be controlled by the first switch in 1 and the switch at 6.

    • White wires are connected on the left

    • Black wires are spliced together and connected to the top right

    • Red wires are spliced together and connected to the bottom right




  6. 3-way switch


    • This switch should control outlets 4 & 5 along with Switch 1 at 1.

    • 1-ea 3-wire cable running in/out of the box

    • White wire with black tape (which I'm assuming is the single white wire spliced to the rest of the black hots from the panel in 1) is connected to the black screw

    • Black wire is connected to the left screw

    • Red wire is connected to the right screw

    • I assume the red and black wires are the travellers connected to Switch 1 in 1.




  7. Duplex outlet


    • 1-ea 2-wire cable (white & black) runs into this box

    • White is connected on bottom left

    • Black is connected on bottom right




  8. Single 2-prong outlet


    • Outlet is recessed into the wall. Apparently this is what they used to do before most clocks ran on batteries.

    • I haven't opened this up...




I'm definitely missing something. Will someone please help me figure out what it is?










share|improve this question









New contributor



watson387 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











I apologise if there is an answer to my question in one of the other multiple 3 way switch questions, but if there is I couldn't find it.



I just bought an old house, built in 1967. I'm replacing the outlets and switches (for looks; everything worked fine but was filthy, had broken ceramic, etc.) and I've run into a problem.



There are two 3-way switches (one inside the front door and one at the end of the hallway) that should control two of the outlets in the living room. There is no overhead light. There were two candle-holder looking lights mounted to the wall above the fire place that were plugged into the outlet there. These switches were used to turn the lights on and off. There is another outlet in the room that also was controlled by these.



I replaced all of the outlets and switches in the room (except the old clock outlet) and the power all works. The problem is that the outlets that should be controlled by the switches are powered all the time no matter the positions of the switches. I've tested the terminals on the switches and they are doing their job (flicking the switch transfers power) so I'm assuming the problem is in the outlet wiring, although I've been known to be wrong before.



I'm no artist but I made this diagram and wrote it all out to try to help explain:
Living Room Layout





  1. Box with 5 switches


    • 3-ea 2-way switches and 2-ea 3-way switches

    • Power feed from panel enters room here:


      • 1 black wire: split to 4-ea black wires and 1-ea white wire (which appears to be the hot, white-with-black-tape wire in 6)

      • 1 white wire: spliced to 5-ea white wires



    • Switch 1: 3-way switch.


      • This switch should control outlets 4 & 5 along with the 3-way switch at 6.

      • This is the only switch in the box that doesn't have one of the black wires from the panel attached to it

      • 1-ea red and 1-ea black traveller from 6 are connected to either side of the switch (red on right, black on left).

      • 1-ea red wire running out of the box toward 2 is connected to the black screw.



    • Switch 2: 3-way switch. This switch and another 3-way in the basement control the lights on the post in the driveway.


      • 1-ea black from the panel is connected to the black screw

      • 1-ea black and 1-ea red travellers run from the switch out of the box



    • Switches 3 - 5: 2-way switches that control different things (porch lights, etc.)


      • All 2-way switches have 1-ea black from the panel and 1-ea black travelling from each switch out of the box






  2. Duplex outlet


    • Box has 2-ea 3-wire cables (white, black, red) running in/out of it.

    • White wires are connected to the left side.

    • Black wires are spliced together then connected to the bottom right

    • Red wires are spliced together then connected to the top right




  3. Duplex outlet


    • Box has 2-ea 3-wire cables (white, black, red) running in/out of it

    • White wires are connected to the left side.

    • Black wires are spliced together then connected to the bottom right

    • Red wires are spliced together then connected to the top right




  4. Duplex outlet


    • This outlet should be controlled by the first switch in 1 and the switch at 6.

    • Box has 2-ea 3-wire cables (white, black, red) running in/out of it

    • White wires are spliced together then connected to the bottom left screw

    • Black wires are spliced together then connected to the bottom right

    • Red wires are spliced together then connected to the top right




  5. Duplex outlet


    • This outlet should be controlled by the first switch in 1 and the switch at 6.

    • White wires are connected on the left

    • Black wires are spliced together and connected to the top right

    • Red wires are spliced together and connected to the bottom right




  6. 3-way switch


    • This switch should control outlets 4 & 5 along with Switch 1 at 1.

    • 1-ea 3-wire cable running in/out of the box

    • White wire with black tape (which I'm assuming is the single white wire spliced to the rest of the black hots from the panel in 1) is connected to the black screw

    • Black wire is connected to the left screw

    • Red wire is connected to the right screw

    • I assume the red and black wires are the travellers connected to Switch 1 in 1.




  7. Duplex outlet


    • 1-ea 2-wire cable (white & black) runs into this box

    • White is connected on bottom left

    • Black is connected on bottom right




  8. Single 2-prong outlet


    • Outlet is recessed into the wall. Apparently this is what they used to do before most clocks ran on batteries.

    • I haven't opened this up...




I'm definitely missing something. Will someone please help me figure out what it is?







electrical wiring multiway-switch






share|improve this question









New contributor



watson387 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.










share|improve this question









New contributor



watson387 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 1 hour ago







watson387













New contributor



watson387 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








asked 8 hours ago









watson387watson387

162 bronze badges




162 bronze badges




New contributor



watson387 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




New contributor




watson387 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • There are a few things that are often missed when people change receptacles and switches.

    – Harper
    6 hours ago











  • "the outlets are hot all the time" ! This is the most significant thing in your post. Outlets should never be hot, especially if nothing is plugged into them. Heat is a symptom of a partial short somewhere: be prepared for fire or electrocution.

    – Ray Butterworth
    2 hours ago











  • I don't mean hot to the touch I mean always powered as in the switches aren't working. I'll edit my post.

    – watson387
    1 hour ago



















  • There are a few things that are often missed when people change receptacles and switches.

    – Harper
    6 hours ago











  • "the outlets are hot all the time" ! This is the most significant thing in your post. Outlets should never be hot, especially if nothing is plugged into them. Heat is a symptom of a partial short somewhere: be prepared for fire or electrocution.

    – Ray Butterworth
    2 hours ago











  • I don't mean hot to the touch I mean always powered as in the switches aren't working. I'll edit my post.

    – watson387
    1 hour ago

















There are a few things that are often missed when people change receptacles and switches.

– Harper
6 hours ago





There are a few things that are often missed when people change receptacles and switches.

– Harper
6 hours ago













"the outlets are hot all the time" ! This is the most significant thing in your post. Outlets should never be hot, especially if nothing is plugged into them. Heat is a symptom of a partial short somewhere: be prepared for fire or electrocution.

– Ray Butterworth
2 hours ago





"the outlets are hot all the time" ! This is the most significant thing in your post. Outlets should never be hot, especially if nothing is plugged into them. Heat is a symptom of a partial short somewhere: be prepared for fire or electrocution.

– Ray Butterworth
2 hours ago













I don't mean hot to the touch I mean always powered as in the switches aren't working. I'll edit my post.

– watson387
1 hour ago





I don't mean hot to the touch I mean always powered as in the switches aren't working. I'll edit my post.

– watson387
1 hour ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















6














My understanding from the description (very good by the way) is that you have two duplex receptacles that have the two upper outlets both simultaneously controlled by the three way switches. The lower outlets should be on all the time.



If that assumption is correct, then the solution is very simple. Turn off the power, unmount the receptacles, but leave wires connected, and snap off the tab between the screws on the hot side (red and black). This will electrically disconnect the upper circuit (switched) from the lower (always on).



enter image description here






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    My thought as well.

    – Britt
    8 hours ago











  • Thank you for your reply. It got dark before I had a chance to get to the house tonight so I couldn't try it yet. I'll update after I try it tomorrow.

    – watson387
    1 hour ago














Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function() {
var channelOptions = {
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "73"
};
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
createEditor();
});
}
else {
createEditor();
}
});

function createEditor() {
StackExchange.prepareEditor({
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader: {
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
},
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
});


}
});






watson387 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fdiy.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f168556%2f3-way-switches-no-longer-serving-their-purpose%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









6














My understanding from the description (very good by the way) is that you have two duplex receptacles that have the two upper outlets both simultaneously controlled by the three way switches. The lower outlets should be on all the time.



If that assumption is correct, then the solution is very simple. Turn off the power, unmount the receptacles, but leave wires connected, and snap off the tab between the screws on the hot side (red and black). This will electrically disconnect the upper circuit (switched) from the lower (always on).



enter image description here






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    My thought as well.

    – Britt
    8 hours ago











  • Thank you for your reply. It got dark before I had a chance to get to the house tonight so I couldn't try it yet. I'll update after I try it tomorrow.

    – watson387
    1 hour ago
















6














My understanding from the description (very good by the way) is that you have two duplex receptacles that have the two upper outlets both simultaneously controlled by the three way switches. The lower outlets should be on all the time.



If that assumption is correct, then the solution is very simple. Turn off the power, unmount the receptacles, but leave wires connected, and snap off the tab between the screws on the hot side (red and black). This will electrically disconnect the upper circuit (switched) from the lower (always on).



enter image description here






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    My thought as well.

    – Britt
    8 hours ago











  • Thank you for your reply. It got dark before I had a chance to get to the house tonight so I couldn't try it yet. I'll update after I try it tomorrow.

    – watson387
    1 hour ago














6












6








6







My understanding from the description (very good by the way) is that you have two duplex receptacles that have the two upper outlets both simultaneously controlled by the three way switches. The lower outlets should be on all the time.



If that assumption is correct, then the solution is very simple. Turn off the power, unmount the receptacles, but leave wires connected, and snap off the tab between the screws on the hot side (red and black). This will electrically disconnect the upper circuit (switched) from the lower (always on).



enter image description here






share|improve this answer













My understanding from the description (very good by the way) is that you have two duplex receptacles that have the two upper outlets both simultaneously controlled by the three way switches. The lower outlets should be on all the time.



If that assumption is correct, then the solution is very simple. Turn off the power, unmount the receptacles, but leave wires connected, and snap off the tab between the screws on the hot side (red and black). This will electrically disconnect the upper circuit (switched) from the lower (always on).



enter image description here







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 8 hours ago









Chris CudmoreChris Cudmore

11.8k6 gold badges45 silver badges79 bronze badges




11.8k6 gold badges45 silver badges79 bronze badges








  • 1





    My thought as well.

    – Britt
    8 hours ago











  • Thank you for your reply. It got dark before I had a chance to get to the house tonight so I couldn't try it yet. I'll update after I try it tomorrow.

    – watson387
    1 hour ago














  • 1





    My thought as well.

    – Britt
    8 hours ago











  • Thank you for your reply. It got dark before I had a chance to get to the house tonight so I couldn't try it yet. I'll update after I try it tomorrow.

    – watson387
    1 hour ago








1




1





My thought as well.

– Britt
8 hours ago





My thought as well.

– Britt
8 hours ago













Thank you for your reply. It got dark before I had a chance to get to the house tonight so I couldn't try it yet. I'll update after I try it tomorrow.

– watson387
1 hour ago





Thank you for your reply. It got dark before I had a chance to get to the house tonight so I couldn't try it yet. I'll update after I try it tomorrow.

– watson387
1 hour ago










watson387 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










draft saved

draft discarded


















watson387 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.













watson387 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.












watson387 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
















Thanks for contributing an answer to Home Improvement Stack Exchange!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid



  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fdiy.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f168556%2f3-way-switches-no-longer-serving-their-purpose%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

Taj Mahal Inhaltsverzeichnis Aufbau | Geschichte | 350-Jahr-Feier | Heutige Bedeutung | Siehe auch |...

Baia Sprie Cuprins Etimologie | Istorie | Demografie | Politică și administrație | Arii naturale...

Nicolae Petrescu-Găină Cuprins Biografie | Opera | In memoriam | Varia | Controverse, incertitudini...