I am replacing a dated outlet. when I removed the plate, I found 1 black wire, one white wire and a ground wire. The other outlets I replaced had two sets of wires, 2-black, 2-white, 1-ground. How do I replace so that both outlets work?
Electrical – Replacing and outlet (2 plugs) with only one black, one-white, has ground wire
electricalwiring
Related Topic
- Electrical – Wiring an outlet with two white, one red, and a ground
- Electrical – Replacing outlet; found one white wire hot. How to connect
- Electrical – My light wiring has 2 white wires & one black wire
- Electrical – Replacing receptacles – why are white and black wires crossed
- Wiring – How to connect one set of wire (+ ground wire) to outlet
- Wiring – 2 black and 2 white wires, but one black & one white are on the same side of a switched receptacle
- Electrical – Replacing a wall outlet with three black and three white wires with a smart outlet with one white and one black wire
- How to wire this dimmer switch? it expects two blacks but there’s one white and one black
Best Answer
The first outlets you replaced had a black wire, white wire and ground coming in, feeding the outlet and then leaving the outlet to go to another outlet, feeding it and going somewhere else. The last outlet on the circuit will only have a black wire, white wire and ground coming in to feed the outlet and will end there. Just hook the single black wire to the brass screw and the white wire to the silver screw and the ground wire to the green screw.
When replacing any outlets or switches, do not utilize the backstabs as they are prone to failure. Use the screw terminals and shepherd hook the wire around them.... and turn off the power
If the outlets you're replacing utilize four screws on the outlets, you can pigtail the wires and only use two screws. This will make future replacements easier and will provide more reliable service.