Did you know that your house is probably wired like a Christmas Tree? We’re talking those pesky series connections that give you so many problems when one light goes out on your Christmas Tree and the whole string goes dark. You have three choices at that point: You can ignore the dark string of lights, you can change all the bulbs, one at a time until you find the one that is burned out, or, if you’re like me, you’ll go buy another string and end up throwing the other one out.
Well, the same problem can happen in your home. If a series connection goes bad somewhere in one of your home electrical circuits, the whole circuit will go out. And, in your home, it’s a bit more of a problem to diagnose and fix the problem than it was on that string of lights. You see, you really don’t have three options in your home. You can’t just ignore it because a large portion of your outlets no longer work. Nor does anything that’s plugged into them. And you can’t just toss the circuit away and buy another. All those wires, from connection to connection, run inside the walls. Really your only option is to start at the circuit breaker and check every place in that circuit that two or more wires are joined together.
The urgency of getting this work done on a failed series connection is quite a bit higher than replacing a bulb in a string of Christmas lights, too. A loose wire in a house circuit is a very definite and immediate fire hazard. It’s something that has to be taken care of right now - it’s not something you can shove back in the basement until next year when you bring the tree out again. And this probably means you’ll be digging around under insulation in the upper crawl space, running from room to room, and so forth trying to find the bad connection. Beginning to sound like a job for a professional? We at Lon Lockwood Electric think it would be best if you hired one and soon.
And, when your electrician comes to repair that connection, please ask him or her to talk with you about the advantage of parallel connections over series connections. With a simple jumper type connection at every place where two or more wires are joined together, when one connection goes bad, the rest of the circuit will continue working and you won’t be so inconvenienced in the future.


