Submitted by speedyspaghetti t3_10q52ii in DIY
Hey everyone -
So I figured that the recent flooding in my house due to the California storms was a good excuse to get some minor items done while I was doing the big restoration.
One bedroom in my house has 2-prong receptacles, which I figured I would just replace with GFCI outlets to safely ground them. However, while I was working on the adjacent room, I decided to replace the ivory colored outlets with nicer white ones. When I plugged in my tester to each outlet, I noticed that all of the 4 3-prong outlets had an open ground. I turned off the power, pulled off the plate and outlet, and found that there in fact is a ground wire running through the box, but it is not connected to the outlet. The ground wire, however, runs through the box (meaning, it runs in from one box and to another one, it is a continuous piece) and is not cut in a way that I could easily connect it to the outlet.
The wire seems rather thin, much more so than the other ground wires in my house, so I'm guessing this is an older style of Romex? I believe it is 16 gauge.
Would it be safe to cut the existing ground wire, make a pigtail with another piece of ground wire using a Wago or twist cap, and then connecting that to the outlet? If so, would it be ok to use 14 gauge wire for the last bit of pigtail (where it connects to the outlet) since I don't have any 16 gauge on hand, but I do have some 14/2 Romex.
Thank you!
KingstenHd t1_j6nvpmt wrote
Keep in mind when working after someone else that especially when mistakes are made that they may have never grounded it all the way back to the main panel or any sub panels.
Yes what you are saying is fine and safe if they didn't do some weird ass backwards other things. If all they did was skip grounding the outlets then pigtailing it will work perfectly fine as well as going to a larger wire size is fine.