Electrical – Trying to Replace 3-Way Light Switch

electricalswitch

I'm aware that the WeMo light switch does not work as a 3-way switch, but I had purchased it before opening up the existing light switch plate and understanding the wiring I would work with.

Anyway, I removed the light switch plate and discovered what appears to be a 3-way switch. (I recently moved into this house with a whole bunch of sketchy wiring, and actually DO NOT know the location of another switch that controls that same set of exterior lights on my detached garage!) A red jumper cable is connected to the common terminal of the switch, and two black cables connect to the other terminals on the light switch. The box didn't exhibit any obvious sign of a separate (white) neutral cable.

On a lark, I decided to wire the WeMo as follows:

  • Red jumper cable to the expected white, neutral terminal on the WeMo,
  • Black cables to black terminals on the WeMo, and
  • Capped the green/ground terminal on the WeMo.

To my surprise, the WeMo had power and booted up. However, when I pressed the WeMo button to turn on the lights, none of the garage's exterior lights turned on. I swapped the black wires and encountered the same dead end, so I restored the old switch and can turn the garage's exterior lights on/off.

I'm certainly disappointed that I didn't successfully install the WeMo, but I'm also confused. If the WeMo had power, clearly I had both hot and neutral correctly wired to the WeMo. Assuming the WeMo isn't defective, why wasn't it actually acting as a switch? What are some theories on how these lights are actually wired?

Best Answer

I'm just thinking out loud here. It is hard to state anything with certainty in a situation like this where there is no guarantee of what somebody else did with the wiring a long time ago...so forgive me if this suggestion isn't even worth what you paid for it. ;)

From what you have said here, it sounds to me like that red wire makes its way back to the lights, and acts as the "hot" for the lights. Who knows where the lights are getting their neutral side connection. Doesn't really matter. Obviously it is getting there somehow.

So to make the lights light, your existing switch is getting "hot" from one of the two black wires, and is supplying that to the red wire.

So think of your red wire as the "hot out", and ONE OF the two black wires is your "hot in".

So you need to use a meter to see which one of the two black wires is your "hot in", and treat it that way and cap off the other black. Then use your red wire as the "hot out".

Again, this is just me thinking out loud about what I would try. I take no responsibility for any bad stuff that might result from it. All possible disclaimers apply. ;)