The previous owner of my house removed a light fixture and installed canned lights in my living room. The light fixture location was capped and I had a switch that seemed to do nothing so I assumed that switch used to work the light fixture and I was planning on installing a fan (once reinforcing it). If you look at the picture below the switch on the right is the one I referenced and it is in fact wired to that light fixture (I tested the continuity of the hot wire). But the switch only has the hot wire connected, and the neutral wire from the light fixture is pigtailed in with the neutrals of the canned lights. Any help on why it would be wired this way is greatly appreciated.
https://imgur.com/a/qi529DK![enter image description here]
Best Answer
Because this is the way normal household switches work.
Normal household switches are single-pole, single-throw switches. That is, they only break one side of the circuit, like this:
Where the top line represents the hot, switched line, the
B
is the bulb and the bottom line represents the neutral.If you have a switch wired like this:
That's a double-pole switch and is unnecessary in residential wiring.
It's common in a double-gang box to bring the power in and send two load lines out, one to each switched device.
It sounds like this is exactly how your switches are wired.