fossiljoseph
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I need help. My bathroom lights and outlets in the next bedroom are out. They are not connected to a GFI. The circuit breakers all read 120. Can’t figure this out.
I had the same. Loose wires at the switch, earthquake shook them loose disconnected it. Probably not tightened properly during construction.I need help. My bathroom lights and outlets in the next bedroom are out. They are not connected to a GFI. The circuit breakers all read 120. Can’t figure this out.
If you have a GFI on the same circuit then check those too. It could be in another room and still affect stuff down the line. If that isn't the problem then take a volt meter and start checking everything to see where it drops out. Could be a bad switch/socket.
Like these guys said, it’s possible GFI is somewhere else. In my condo, GFI was in the garage and it killed the power in only one bathroom upstairs.Not a lot to go on lol. But definitely make sure there is more a rouge GFI. Sometime they are strange and garage outlet may control your bedroom.
Past that isolate what's on the breaker by process of elimination then start pulling outlets and making sure nothing is loose, make site power is off.
Also there are legit sparkys here that will blow my advice out the water so probably wait for them lol.
I need help. My bathroom lights and outlets in the next bedroom are out. They are not connected to a GFI. The circuit breakers all read 120. Can’t figure this out.
Fuk, you guys are slipen...I need help. My bathroom lights and outlets in the next bedroom are out. They are not connected to a GFI. The circuit breakers all read 120. Can’t figure this out.
Fuggin amazon crap. Cool you fingered it out.Thank you everyone. I took all the outlets and lights apart. The last outlet had an Amazon special surge protector plugged in and had shorted out the outlet.
The gfci doesnt have to be in the bathroom . Go find every gfci in the house and reset it. Look for gfci outside, garage and basement.I need help. My bathroom lights and outlets in the next bedroom are out. They are not connected to a GFI. The circuit breakers all read 120. Can’t figure this out.
We got more sparkys on here than boat owners. Taboma wrote the handbook.
We got more sparkys on here than boat owners. Taboma wrote the handbook.
I'm not sure I'd offer the assumption that all other outlets on a particular circuit downstream of a GFCI are also protected. That only applies if the GFCI has been wired in a "Feed Through" configuration and not intentionally "By-passed". I will agree it's relatively normal for GFCI required receptacles to be wired in this manner, but not otherwise required and there can be valid exceptions.The gfci doesnt have to be in the bathroom . Go find every gfci in the house and reset it. Look for gfci outside, garage and basement.
General information on a gfci. The gfci protects every outlet in the circuit after the gfci outlet. The outlets can be on different floors, rooms, outside, inside etc. its possible the gfci is outside or in the garage and protecting areas in the house. Gfcis are required in wet locations. Kitchens, bathrooms, basements, garages and outside.
This is what the OP stated " My bathroom lights and outlets in the next bedroom are out " --- didn't mention bathroom receptacles being out.My biggest concern is that the original poster said his bathroom lights and receptacles were not hooked to a GFI circuit. I certainly hope that isn’t the case and he is mistaken. Maybe a GFI breaker?
FIIK I ain’t no Sparky.