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Replacing a electric receptacle in the middle of a series

Home Improvement Asked by defect on December 19, 2020

I have an electric receptacle that looks like this.

electrical socket with two sets of wires

It’s half-hot and in the middle of a series to one other socket.

UPDATE: The photo above is the one I had goofed up putting back together. Here’s what it actually looks like (the red and black are on the same side as expected)

sides of outlet

And this is of course a plain receptacle.

front/rear of basic receptacle

I haven’t been able to figure out (even with similar results) if it’s possible to replace the top one with a bottom one. Another problem is determining which wire in each pair is from upstream or downstream.

Am I supposed to pigtail the pairs, along with a third wire that goes to this outlet? Mentally that doesn’t seem like the right thing, but I couldn’t really tell you why.

What would be the "correct" replacement receptacle for this usage? I’m having a hard time picking the right search terms.

2 Answers

One weird thing to my eyes is that white and red are on the same side.

Yeah, that's broke-a-doodle. Either someone wildly miswired other points in the circuit, or this tripped the breaker instantly when someone threw the switch, or it "burned out" one of the backstab connections which happens all the time.

Another problem is determining which wire in each pair is from upstream or downstream.

Doesn't matter. Work it out; regardless of what the answer is, the wiring will be identical. So it is not a thing you need to know.

Am I supposed to pigtail the pairs, along with a third wire that goes to this outlet? Mentally that doesn't seem like the right thing, but I couldn't really tell you why.

It literally does not matter. You can pigtail, or you can use a receptacle which allows an onboard splice. Your call, you can do it any way which suits you.

For instance, I usually pigtail because I'm attaching quad outlets on metal boxes in stress positions like on ceilings or under desks. Much easier to assemble the domed covers and pigtails on an ergonomic bench!

The only exception is certain applications where pigtailing is required. Safety ground, obviously. Or neutral in certain types of circuits.

What would be the "correct" replacement receptacle for this usage?

Not the 50 cent cheapie in your photo. If you graduate to the $2.50 spec-grade outlets, most of them have a feature called "screw-and-clamp" where each screw also functions as a plate clamp, that can grab up to 2 wires. Easy peasy.

Correct answer by Harper - Reinstate Monica on December 19, 2020

This example should trip the breaker the second it is turned on.

Someone screwed up and stabbed the reds on the wrong side. They probably broke the tab to get half the receptacle to work and not trip the breaker, or pulled the red feeder at the switch.

When the new receptacle is installed don’t use the backstabs--they are the leading cause of failure. Pigtail is the correct method, or use more expensive outlets which have a plate at the screw and allow 2 wires per screw.

The tab should be broken on the black/red or "hot" side. The tab should not be broken on the white side.

Normally the red is a switched hot and the black is a always hot. Since this was mis-wired it would never work with both receptacles.

Answered by Ed Beal on December 19, 2020

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