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Some ceiling lights in kitchen not working.
I went into our garage and looked at the circuit breaker box and it looked like I found the one that is not working and purchased a replacement at Ace yesterday.
Just curious about the circuit breaker box? I can easily make sure the light switches are off in the kitchen. Do these circuit breakers of which they had a number of 20s in basket at Ace just plug into the board or do you have to take the whole door off and do wiring? Eaton Cutler-Hammer 20 amps Plug In Single Pole Circuit Breaker https://www.acehardware.com/departme...breakers/31481 I will probably just call an electrician but am interested in why they would sell these out in a basket in Ace if a lot of work is involved? Lots of different kinds of screws holding the door on. And I do not feel like electrocuting myself by taking the door off as it looks like it still will have power coming in from above even if the circuit board's main power switch is off? |
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Not a DIY project. Hire an electrician.
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OP, are you sure the circuit breaker is not working? Do you know that you need to press the breaker switch to the "off" position, and then to the "on" position to reset it? Just pressing it to the "on" position will not reset it. Also, it seems strange that all of the kitchen ceiling lights would not be on the same circuit. If some of them are working, have you identified another breaker that controls them? If not, then the issue is not the breaker.
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But I really would not know what I was doing after just looking at the panel. |
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OP, our house (2013 vintage Gardenia) has several SETS of ceiling lights on ONE circuit breaker, Labeled GENERAL lighting, this feed goes to 3 or 4 switches which control each set of lights. As mentioned above, this sounds like a switch, it also sounds like to are very uncomfortable working around electrical equipment. I recently used Hayes Electric and was very pleased with their work and price, if you want a licensed electrician. NOTE: a switch replacement is typically allowed to be done by the homeowner, and you can use a handyman to do the switch replacement.
Tip, on our house, when the lights are off the DIMMER has a small green light, if the green light is off, either the circuit is dead, the switch has failed, or ALL of the light bulbs on that circuit have failed. Hope this helps. |
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If you can verify which circuit breaker in the panel controls the lights above the kitchen table, you should be able to replace the switch safely by turning off the breaker. If you don't feel comfortable doing it, then hire an electrician. But, most homeowners are able to do it. |
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Your switch and the breaker are mechanical and both are prone to failure with time and usage, but the switch is used thousands of times of each time the breaker is used. Only that set of lights are impacted and no other lights or outlets. The conclusion is obvious, it's a bad switch. This is a simple DIY project if you have any DIY skills at all. |
Inside an electric panel is not the place to learn DYI....you could get killed in there if you slip or touch the wrong thing... call an electrician, and live to post another day !
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thank you |
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Everybody on this thread is giving the OP too much info that is confusing. Each house is different. For example, all of our kitchen lights are controlled by 2 switches. If the OP took the advice on swapping 1 of these switches, not knowing they are a 3-way, you would have a problem.
IMO, if somebody doesn’t know much about electricity, I would keep the conversation simple like checking the breaker, or changing the light bulb. |
I switch out my own breakers but if you don’t feel comfortable doing it themselves, definitely get a electrician but be prepared to pay pretty heavy for this 10 min. job. Breakers just snap in. Once you unsnap the breaker the break is dead. Just don’t touch the brass bar that the breaker touches. Or you can just flip the big whole house switch at the top & then the whole breaker box will be dead. But in your case call a electrician!
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Circuit Breaker replacement
Watch this youtube. It is a good explanation of the procedure. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s6OGF66IskI
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Breaker
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Hire an electrician
I mean you no disrespect, but if you are asking these questions then you really shouldn't be opening your breaker box.. it's an easy fix if you know what your doing, so it shouldn't cost an arm or a leg.
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Why are posters telling the OP how to change out the breaker when nobody knows if that’s the problem. IMO, a bad breaker would be the last piece I would look at replacing.
Do we know if the breaker has been reset? How about the secondary test button/switch on the breaker? Most circuit breakers made in the past decade or more have a test button/white switch on them that can reset. I’ve had to replace some of these for garages because they will flip too easy when hooking up air compressors or worm drive saws with high amperage ratings. So not only you can switch the main breaker on/off, you can press this test button/white switch on the breaker on/off too. I have a test pen that beeps when close (not touching any wires) to a hot wire so what I can do is take off the switch plate on the switch for the lights that don’t work, and with the switch off (not a 3-way circuit), you should have the pen light go on pointing to either the top or bottom screw on the side of the switch. If you don’t have power to either screw, then you don’t have power coming in to the switch. If you do have power coming into the switch, then after you flip the switch on, you should have power going to both screws on the switch. If you don’t, you have a bad switch. This is not for a 3-way light circuit. Also, I’m not telling you to do any electrical work or that you should touch any electrical wires, you should hire this out. Do not use the old fashion pins to test your circuits, only use the test pens with the plastic tips so you can’t create an arc. To be safe, hire any job out that you don’t understand, especially electricity and natural gas |
Hey Tal, switch a lightbulb that you are certain that is functional with one of them there pesky ones that won’t turn on. You may find it’s a lightbulb dilemma.
I had Pikes Electric change each light in the kitchen to LEDS lately and the difference is dramatic but it ain’t cheap. Good luck! |
The whole panel needs to be off to change this. One mistake will kill you or knock you to the other side of the garage.
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Plus make sure the breaker you bought is the same make and size as the circuit breaker you are replacing. |
I know this sounds crazy but try different bulbs…we had a electrician for a couple new light bulbs that would flicker or not work in the kitchen…electrician put other new bulbs in and worked perfectly. He said very often new bulbs in a package may be defective…they work great now!
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Some things mentioned so far have important omissions you need to know about.
The main circuit breaker does shut off power to the entire house. It does that by shutting off power to the rails that al the other breakers plug on to. There is still power in the breaker panel that can kill you. The power feed coming into the panel, connected to the main breaker, is still hot. A tripped breaker may look like it is in the on position. But it will be slightly off the fully on position. To reset it, push it completely off, wait 15 seconds, and push back to the full on position. It will clunk. If it trips right away, you are done, call an electrician to fix the short. The easiest way to troubleshoot this is with a volt meter. That will tell you what voltage is present. There are non-contact devices that will beep and (most) light up a led to tell if power is present. It does that by detecting the field given off by live wires. If it indicates, then you have power somewhere near. Depending on how things are wired, it might be a nearby circuit, or the circuit you are expecting. If it does not indicate, it says power MIGHT NOT be present. Maybe you are too far away? Maybe voltage is low due to a bad connection? You must be sure it is really working properly. Test it on a known live circuit (another outlet, lamp wire, etc) and see that it works. Then retest the thing you first looked at. And retest on a live circuit again. Only then is it possible that power is off there. Now use a voltmeter to confirm. The normal use for it is to warn for power unexpectedly present. Also a quick way to find the right breaker; first see power is present, then trip breaker, and see power is now off. Good electricians will always recheck with a voltmeter for safety. Not all dimmer switches have lights on them. Remember, light on means power is present. Light off does not mean anything. What if the light or switch is defective? Replacing a breaker is easy. Take off panel cover. Trip off the bad breaker. Measure with a voltmeter. Unsnap from back plane then disconnect wire on it. Put wire on new breaker (of correct make and same amp rating) and torque screw to specifications. Be sure breaker is off and snap back into panel. Turn it on. Don't touch other wires or any part of the back plane where the breakers mount onto. Some people trip off the main breaker to make it less likely to contact live power. If it's a GFCI or Arcfault breaker, there will be another wire from the breaker that needs to be removed and the new one reconnected. AC voltage in your house causes an interesting action on your muscles. It makes them contract. If you grab a live wire with bad insulation, your hand squeezes harder on the wire. Likely you cannot let go. You might be able to launch yourself away with your legs if you are lucky. A friend with you might grab you to pull you away, and they could get electrocuted too. That can be wiring in a breaker panel, lamp, outlet, or a light switch. Fixing this issue is not a complicated process. Taking off the breaker panel cover to fool around inside is not a job for a novice. Not much you can do inside without first using test equipment to see what is really happening. If you are having troubles in more than one circuit, you likely need an electrician. If it's several circuits, you absolutely need an electrician. What is common to multiple circuit problems? The main power feed, main breaker, breaker panel itself. None that a homeowner should fool with. |
Led lights don’t always work with some makes of dimmer switches.
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I never saw where you said you changed the light bulbs, even LED lights burn out. Have you changed the bulbs before you checked breakers etc. I have changed or added many breakers over the years. The hardest part it the electric box cover is heavy. Unless it is a ground fault breaker you just pull the old breaker out and plug the new one in. To be safe shut off the main but you can do it with the power on as well.
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