Do lighting circuits have a neutral?

We refer to this as “light-first wiring” which means you do not have a neutral at the switch. The live from the light to the switch uses the brown wire, then the switched live uses the blue wire and is normally marked with some brown tape to indicate it is actually a switched live and not a neutral.

Should the neutral wire be live?





Neutral is not necessarily zero and assuming it is will likely get you electrocuted. The general idea is that live supplies the voltage and neutral is the return wire. In most installations the live is at the required voltage and the neutral line is connected to ground at some point (so zero volts relative to ground).

What happens if you wire live and neutral wrong in a light?

There would be a shock hazard, and some devices might not work correctly. Depending on where exactly the wires are flipped, ground fault detecting circuit breakers may become ineffective. All around, this is a bad idea.

What if light fixture has no neutral wire?

The neutral wire allows the completion of the circuit and the switch to have power even when it’s turned to the off position when you want the lights off. Without this neutral wire in place, the circuit is broken any time the switch is now in the off position. It remains has power when the switch is in the On Mode.

Can a bulb light without neutral?

The word “neutral” is so familiar in the electrical realm that it is impossible to forget the word even if we forget our own name. Many of us have the idea that no circuit is complete without neutral. This means that it is not possible to light an electric lamp without a neutral line.

Why does my neutral wire have voltage?





The voltage you are seeing on the neutral wire is conducting through that other load from the hot. Your voltage tester is detecting voltage without drawing current so the resistance of the other load is not seen. Try disconnecting/turning off all other loads on that circuit.

Why are my neutral wires hot?

Why Is A Neutral Wire Hot? A neutral wire is hot because of a wrong wire, wrong readings, open neutral and low resistance. A layperson does not have the expertise to diagnose a problem of this kind. You are better off hiring a professional.

Should the neutral wire have voltage?

The neutral wire is often said to have zero voltage on it. If you touch that wire on a live system, however, you will often find out very quickly that technically having zero voltage is very different from meaning there is no electricity present.

Is there power on a neutral wire?

To summarize: the hot wire carries electricity from the power supply and takes it to the load (lightbulb). Neutral wires take the used electricity from the load and bring it back to the power supply.

Why is there no neutral in my light switch?



Switches don’t get neutrals, they only want 2 wires: hot and switched-hot. Unless you’re dealing with a smartswitch, those take neutrals but there is still a switched hot to account for. And red is a common switched-hot color, but it would never, ever, ever, ever be used for neutral. Ever.

Is it OK to use ground as neutral?

A ground is not a neutral period. The last thing you want is the chassis of your washer as a current carrying conductor. If your house has a bonded neutral and ground then it should be at only at one connector and that is your circuit breaker panel and nowhere else. This is actually a huge safety issue.

How do you know if a light switch has a neutral wire?

Remove the wall plate of the existing switch by either snapping it off or unscrewing it. Unscrew the existing switch from the electrical box and slowly pull it out just enough to reveal the wires connected to it. If you see a white wire, or a group of them, then you have neutral wiring.

How do I know if my neutral wire is working?



Quote from the video:
Quote from Youtube video: You have a neutral if the two controlled wires are white and black look in the box.

Why does my light switch have 2 black wires?

STEP 3: Identify the terminal and ground wires.



Observe the layout of the wires. You should see two black wires, each connecting to a different screw on the side of the switch. These are called terminal screws. You will also see two white (neutral) wires that connect to one another in the box.

Which wire is hot if both are black?

The black wire is the “hot” wire, it carries the electricity from the breaker panel into the switch or light source. The white wire is the “neutral” wire, it takes any unused electricity and current and sends it back to the breaker panel.

What happens if you mix up hot and neutral wires?

This happens when the hot and neutral wires get flipped around at an outlet, or upstream from an outlet. Reversed polarity creates a potential shock hazard, but it’s usually an easy repair. Any $5 electrical tester will alert you to this condition, assuming you have a properly grounded three-prong outlet.

What happens if you wire a light fixture backwards?



The fixture still works if you reverse the wires, but the socket sleeve will be hot, and anyone who touches it while changing a bulb can get a shock. When wired correctly, the socket sleeve is neutral and only the small metal tab at the base of the socket is hot.

How do you tell which wire is hot and which is load?

The easiest way of identifying the line/hot and load wires is to check the colors of the insulation. White and grey wires are neutral; green with yellow stripes, green and copper are ground wires, black can be line/upstream wire, red or black are load/downstream. The white or black are travelers.

What happens if you mix up line and load?

If the load and line wiring gets messed up, a ground fault (radio in the tub) won’t trip the GFCI. There is no protection; there’s only the appearance of protection. The GFCI is a booby trap.

How do you test if electrical wires are live?

To test for a live electrical wire either a non-contact voltage tester or a digital multimeter is used. A non-contact voltage tester is the safest way for testing live wires, performed by placing the machine near the wire.