Outlets in living room suddenly died but there is not tripped circuit breaker

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I have a couple of weird things going on. So all of a sudden three outlets went dead. I checked the circuit breaker and nothing was tripped. To make sure, I turned the breaker that controls the 3 outlets on and then off again. Still nothing.

To research, I removed the plates on all three outlets to expose the wiring. All three have 2 black and 2 white wires and a ground. This makes me think they're connected in a series somehow. Two of the outlets are on the same wall within 10 feet. The other outlet is on an opposite wall across the living room.

Things I've tried to diagnose:
With circuit breaker and and off I've check for voltage on all three outlets and all the wires and the two that are on the same wall have absolutely nothing whether the breaker is on or off. The outlet that is on the opposite wall however, has a low voltage reading whether the breaker is on or off. The weird thing that I can't understand is that when I check for voltage on the outlet that is on the opposite wall while my sandals are on, I get the low voltage beep on my voltage pen. However, when my sandals are off and I'm barefoot, I don't get and voltage beep. Why is this?!!

Second question, how can I troubleshoot and try to fix this? Is it a problem at the circuit breaker? I checked every other outlet to make sure nothing is tripped and all the other outlets on the floor are working fine.

Best Answer

Non-contact voltage testers can be very sensitive and misleading. So don't worry too much about that.

This may have been asked before but do ANY of the outlets on the breaker that controls the dead ones have power? If you do, there is probably a connection failure in one of the outlets downstream. That doesn't eliminate the first outlet in the circuit having the failure though, so it's not a perfect test.

2 things come to mind: 1) The infamous "back stab" outlets that frequently fail. You should get a real multi meter and test between hot and neutral, hot and ground, and neutral and ground. If you have power from neutral to ground, you have an open neutral someplace. Multi-meters can be very sensitive as well as non contact testers. It's often useful to have some sort of a load plugged in (such as your lamp), to eliminate any spurious, induced voltages.

With the POWER OFF (Check with meter or non-contact tester to be sure), you might want to start removing the outlets and inspect for damage, loose connections, etc.

2) I had this issue in a previous house I lived in and it turned out to be rodent damage. A mouse had chewed thru a cable. First breaking the circuit and then electrocuting himself! I know because when I opened up the sheetrock there was his little fried body.