end-of-run switch wiring |
What's hilarious to us is that in her introduction, after spending 52 words to explain what chandeliers are, Hageman gravely intoned,
"In order to hang a chandelier, you will need the right equipment and a basic knowledge of wiring."That's certainly rich, coming as it does from a freelancer who quite clearly has neither that equipment nor that knowledge. That Laura decided that "how to wire" is the same as "how to hang" comes as no surprise. Nevertheless, she did so, admonishing her readers to,
"Connect an electrical box if there is not one attached already. This will be braced in the ceiling where the old fixture was."If there wasn't one already, there was no "old fixture," Laura! But there's more (there usually is), and it's worse. Check out how Hageman says to "connect an electrical box":
"Fit an expandable bracket into the hole and place it horizontally between two ceiling joists. Turn the bracket and it will expand to fit tightly in the joists.""Turn the bracket"? is she crazy? Yes, she is: check out her instructions for turning off the power to the circuit:
"[check] the fuse box, which is usually located in the basement. If the place doesn't have a basement, then it may be located in a closet. In the fuse box there are several switches that will go to each room and one overall switch for power. If you are uncertain, then flip all of them off."A) That's not a fuse box, it's a breaker box; and B) if you don't know how to determine whether a circuit is off (in other words, if you're a freelancer who writes romance novels), you should not be messing with electrical wires!
Hageman's unfamiliarity with the task crops up time and again in such instructions as
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¹ The original has been deleted by Leaf Group, but can still be accessed using the Wayback machine at archive.org. Its URL was homesteady.com/how-4683980-wire-chandelier.html
copyright © 2018-2022 scmrak
DDIY - WIRING
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