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Please Help! 4 bulb antique floor lap wiring

T

Tracy

I have my great grandmothers 4 bulb floor lamp that has started to make
crackling noises in the upper bulb. I would like to rewire all ends. It
has me lost as to which wire goes where. Ok.... I also didnt write down
everything ( or map it) while taking it apart. :{ Big Mistake!

The 3 lower bulbs connect to the lower turning switch. Turn once for one
light on, turn again for 2 lights on, turn again for 3 lights on at
once, turn again and all off. The switch has a black, blue and, red wire
coming from it.

The upper turning switch is just your basic off and on, but was wired
thru the the lower wiring.

I would truly appreciate ANY help on rewiring this properly. A diagram
or drawing would make the most sense to me, but any info would really help.

Thank you in advance.....If I havent made anything clear please ask.

Sincerely,

Tracy
 
J

Joseph Meehan

Tracy said:
I have my great grandmothers 4 bulb floor lamp that has started to
make crackling noises in the upper bulb. I would like to rewire all
ends. It has me lost as to which wire goes where. Ok.... I also
didnt write down everything ( or map it) while taking it apart. :{ Big
Mistake!
The 3 lower bulbs connect to the lower turning switch. Turn once for
one light on, turn again for 2 lights on, turn again for 3 lights on
at once, turn again and all off. The switch has a black, blue and, red
wire coming from it.

The upper turning switch is just your basic off and on, but was wired
thru the the lower wiring.

I would truly appreciate ANY help on rewiring this properly. A
diagram or drawing would make the most sense to me, but any info would
really
help.
Thank you in advance.....If I havent made anything clear please ask.

Sincerely,

Tracy

Since it is old and may have even been replaced before, the only safe
way of figuring it out is to use a meter and a small amount of electrical
knowledge. Are you replacing that switch? It might be a good thing to do
if you can find a replacement that will fit. Try bringing the one you have
to a real electrical supply center, one used by the pros. Most cities will
have one or more or you might try a large lighting store. I would consider
the same for all the sockets.
 
J

Jeff Wisnia

Tracy said:
I have my great grandmothers 4 bulb floor lamp that has started to make
crackling noises in the upper bulb. I would like to rewire all ends. It
has me lost as to which wire goes where. Ok.... I also didnt write down
everything ( or map it) while taking it apart. :{ Big Mistake!

The 3 lower bulbs connect to the lower turning switch. Turn once for one
light on, turn again for 2 lights on, turn again for 3 lights on at
once, turn again and all off. The switch has a black, blue and, red wire
coming from it.

The way you describe the switch as having only three leads on it, I'd
say the the bulb lighting sequence for the first three lights had to be:

*********************

All OFF

#1 ON, #2 & #3 OFF

#1 OFF, #2 & #3 ON

#1, #2 and #3 all ON

All OFF again

********************

So, here goes, without benefit of a meter:

Connect the lamp cord's neutral side (the wide plug blade or ribbed side
of the two conductor cord) to the "shell" terminals on ALL four sockets.

Connect the other (hot) side of the lamp cord to the BLACK wire on the
lower switch and also to one lead of the upper switch.

Connect the BLUE wire to the #1 bulb socket's "tip" side and the RED
wire to the #2 and #3 bulbs sockets's "tip" sides.

connect the other lead from the upper switch to the #4 bulb socket's
"tip" terminal.

*****

Now, if the lower switch doesn't control the first three bulbs in the
expected fashion, experiment by swapping the three leads on that switch
around, starting with RED and BLUE. You can't blow anything up that way,
and eventually you'll hit the right combination to control the lights as
you described.

HTH,

Jeff
 
Note antique lamps were NOT built to todays safety standards some tip
over easy. that happened to a friend 125 thousand in home firee damage
caused by antique lamp tipping over.

If in doubt cut wire off lamp keep as momento buy new lamp for safety
 
Note antique lamps were NOT built to todays safety standards some tip
over easy. that happened to a friend 125 thousand in home firee damage
caused by antique lamp tipping over.

If in doubt cut wire off lamp keep as momento buy new lamp for safety
 
Note antique lamps were NOT built to todays safety standards some tip
over easy. that happened to a friend 125 thousand in home firee damage
caused by antique lamp tipping over.

If in doubt cut wire off lamp keep as momento buy new lamp for safety
 
T

Tracy

Note antique lamps were NOT built to todays safety standards some tip
over easy. that happened to a friend 125 thousand in home firee damage
caused by antique lamp tipping over.

If in doubt cut wire off lamp keep as momento buy new lamp for safety

Thank you, but no worries there. It has a HEAVY cast iron base. It is a
really solidly built ornate floor lamp. Its just the wiring that needs
reworked. :}


Tracy
 
Tracy said:
Thank you, but no worries there. It has a HEAVY cast iron base. It is a
really solidly built ornate floor lamp. Its just the wiring that needs
reworked. :}


Tracy

thats good but I think you should upgrade to 3 prong for safety
reasons, a ground cant hurt and one day might save a nasty shock or
worse
 
T

Tracy

Thank you so much Jeff for answering my question so thoroughly.

I know I didnt come off as being fairly mechanically inclined in my
message, but believe it or not Im pretty handy despite my blonde
moments. :} I research and fix most anything, but I could not find any
info about wiring this type of lamp.

I am going to be working on it today ad we shall see how it goes.

BTW, I drew a diagram of the wiring and attached it in my first
attempt to contact this newsgroup, but I guess attachments arent allowed. :{

Again, thanks so much and Ill let you know how it goes.

Tracy
 
M

Michael A. Terrell

Tracy said:
Thank you so much Jeff for answering my question so thoroughly.

I know I didnt come off as being fairly mechanically inclined in my
message, but believe it or not Im pretty handy despite my blonde
moments. :} I research and fix most anything, but I could not find any
info about wiring this type of lamp.

I am going to be working on it today ad we shall see how it goes.

BTW, I drew a diagram of the wiring and attached it in my first
attempt to contact this newsgroup, but I guess attachments arent allowed. :{


You can post it to by
attaching it as a GIF, JPEG, or other common image file. Then, post a
message here giving the name of the post. If you try to post a binary
file here, most people will never see it.


--
Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to
prove it.
Member of DAV #85.

Michael A. Terrell
Central Florida
 
J

James Sweet

Note antique lamps were NOT built to todays safety standards some tip
over easy. that happened to a friend 125 thousand in home firee damage
caused by antique lamp tipping over.

If in doubt cut wire off lamp keep as momento buy new lamp for safety


I know the type he's talking about, they're huge and heavy, quite common
and somewhat valuable as well. If in doubt, put compact fluorescents in
it. I can't stand to see electrical things used strictly as decoration,
it's easy enough to make them work.
 
J

James Sweet

thats good but I think you should upgrade to 3 prong for safety
reasons, a ground cant hurt and one day might save a nasty shock or
worse


Why? I haven't even seen a modern lamp with a 3 wire cord on it, just do
the wiring carefully.
 
ANY lamp can have a wire insulation wear and connect to the case stand
or any surface.

most lamps today are filled with plastic parts and probably double
insulated like many tools.

this probably isnt the case with a antique lamp....
 
M

mm

I have my great grandmothers 4 bulb floor lamp that has started to make
crackling noises in the upper bulb. I would like to rewire all ends. It
has me lost as to which wire goes where. Ok.... I also didnt write down
everything ( or map it) while taking it apart. :{ Big Mistake!

The 3 lower bulbs connect to the lower turning switch. Turn once for one
light on, turn again for 2 lights on, turn again for 3 lights on at
once, turn again and all off. The switch has a black, blue and, red wire
coming from it.

The upper turning switch is just your basic off and on, but was wired
thru the the lower wiring.

I have a lamp just like yours. Look down into the middle socket. It
may be 3-way, and if it is, there is an extra piece of metal in the
bottom of the socket. I'm not saying you *should* use a 3-way bulb in
it, just that you should know whether you can or not.

3 way bulb sockets are a lot like the switch for the 3 lower bulbs.
The 3-way bulbs have 2 filaments, so you start with Off, fil 1, fil 2,
fils 1 and 2. If you have a standard bulb or a bulb where fil 2 is
broken, you'll see On, Off, On, Off.
 
M

mm

Note antique lamps were NOT built to todays safety standards some tip
over easy. that happened to a friend 125 thousand in home firee damage
caused by antique lamp tipping over.

If in doubt cut wire off lamp keep as momento buy new lamp for safety
memento!

Probably a typo but if a mistake, a very common one. I even hear it
on TV sometimes from educated people. Momento is Spanish for moment;
memento is related iirc to memory.

Stacy's great grandmother might be no older than my mother, who would
be 99 now. So while it might be old enough to not be safe, I'm pretty
sure my mother's lamp was built to the same standards as now, with the
possible exception of the wire's insulation, which might be crumbling,
especially, maybe only, where it bends where it goes into the lamp.
But Tracy said he's rewiring it.
 
Tracy said:
I have my great grandmothers 4 bulb floor lamp that has started to make
crackling noises in the upper bulb. I would like to rewire all ends. It
has me lost as to which wire goes where. Ok.... I also didnt write down
everything ( or map it) while taking it apart. :{ Big Mistake!

no comment

The 3 lower bulbs connect to the lower turning switch. Turn once for one
light on, turn again for 2 lights on, turn again for 3 lights on at
once, turn again and all off. The switch has a black, blue and, red wire
coming from it.

The upper turning switch is just your basic off and on, but was wired
thru the the lower wiring.

I would truly appreciate ANY help on rewiring this properly. A diagram
or drawing would make the most sense to me, but any info would really help.

Thank you in advance.....If I havent made anything clear please ask.

Sincerely,

Tracy


Given the lack of wiring info, I'd start by taking a modern bulbholder
+ wire and attaching its 2 wires temporarily to each and every
combination of switch output wires. Write it all down and you've mapped
exactly what the switch is doing. Now if you know which bulbs are to
come on at each switch setting, its easy to see what holders need to
connect to where.

I trust you'll ignore all advice to replace with modern parts.
Honestly.

I dont know how old this is, but if its really 99 years old it might be
a safety hazard. Things before the 1920s were commonly quite clueless
safety wise, with bare live bits not unusual at that time. 2 possible
ways to deal with the situation are:

a) use sleeving around the internal wiring to double insulate it.
b) add an enamelled copper wire to the lamp chassis and wind it along
the mains lead back to the plug. Enamelled copper is close to
invisible.

If any of the visible wiring is crumbling you can get new cloth covered
twisted wire. Beware of substituting pvc as rubber is much more heat
tolerant, and its possible the wires may go somewhere pvc couldnt
handle.

Finally check its got some sort of cordgrip, its almost always easy to
make one out of sight under the base.


NT
 
S

Sam Goldwasser

James Sweet said:
I know the type he's talking about, they're huge and heavy, quite common
and somewhat valuable as well. If in doubt, put compact fluorescents in
it. I can't stand to see electrical things used strictly as decoration,
it's easy enough to make them work.

If you're the type who throw everything out every 5 years, then your
lamps are made of plastic, already had no value when purchased, and
probably melt down with anything above a 60 W (normal) bulb.

There are millions upon millions of older (not antique) lamps in homes
that are mostly metal and could actually take 100 W bulbs without damage. :)
When rewired with properly, they are safe.

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Repair | Main Table of Contents: http://www.repairfaq.org/REPAIR/
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Important: Anything sent to the email address in the message header above is
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T

Tracy

I want to thank everyone for their advice and help. All messages were
read and very much appreciated.

Miss Tracy followed Jeffs accurate and concise directions and everything
went together very well. Thank you! Thank You!

My lamp now has a bright and shiney 15' UL approved cord, all socket
wiring replaced, and a new 3 way upper bulb socket. I still need to
replace the diffuser, which was broken in the recent move. Then I will
be set.

The lamp is quite beautiful and very much worth the time in rewiring.

Again, Thanks for all the great input. Its friendly and helpful people
like you who make the world a better place. :} I wish I could send you
all some freshly baked brownies!!!! :}

Tracy
 
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