Dead-End Single Pole Switches

When a switch is placed after a fixture in a single-pole scenario, the updated code calls for a dedicated neutral conductor in the switch box. A three-conductor cable between the fixture and the switch makes this possible, with the neutral conductor capped off in the switch box for future use.

Tim Healey

When a switch is placed after a fixture in a single-pole scenario, the updated code calls for a dedicated neutral conductor in the switch box. A three-conductor cable between the fixture and the switch makes this possible, with the neutral conductor capped off in the switch box for future use.

As codes look forward to a home-automated future, switches no longer always act as simple drawbridges to control the current traveling to electrical devices, but are becoming devices in and of themselves. Codes answer? Every switch box in a habitable room or bathroom must now have a neutral (more accurately referred to as a “grounded conductor”) to accommodate more complex devices.

To learn more about finish wiring, visit the JLC Field Guide.

No recommended contents to display.