Easy Reads
Easy Reads
This is a compilation of articles that Carol Fey has had published in various HVAC and Contractor magazines, (Contractor Magazine, Plumbing & Mechanical Magazine and Mechanical Business Magazine) as well as other HVAC publications. Here you will find a wealth of information that will surely give you more insight on your upcoming challenges as an HVAC business owner/HVAC technician. These are fun articles meant to be readily absorbed, and give you a few more pearls of wisdom you can use throughout your career.
This is a compilation of articles that Carol Fey has had published in various HVAC and Contractor magazines, (Contractor Magazine, Plumbing & Mechanical Magazine and Mechanical Business Magazine) as well as other HVAC publications. Here you will find a wealth of information that will surely give you more insight on your upcoming challenges as an HVAC business owner/HVAC technician. These are fun articles meant to be readily absorbed, and give you a few more pearls of wisdom you can use throughout your career.
The Mystery Unveiled - Three-Way & Four-Way Switches
March 30, 2006
Carol Fey
Three-way switches - two switches controlling one light.
Figure 1. Switches in series. Click image for larger view.
Here's the switching scenario. You turn on the light at the bottom of the stairs before going up to bed. Once you get upstairs you turn the same light off from a switch at the top of the stairs. For years, maybe your whole life, you take it for granted that either switch turns the same light on or off. Then one day you try to help a buddy wire one in the house he's building. Whoa, this isn't your ordinary light-switch wiring situation! Neither of you can figure out how to make the wiring work. That's because it's not just the wiring. Three-way switches are special switches.
These switches at the top and bottom of the stairs are called three-way switches, even though there are only two of them. If you look closely at them, you'll see that there's no on-off marking like you find on a simple switch. That's because either position can be on or off.
“Three-way” means that there are three components in the circuit - two switches and the light(s). And there are three switch terminal screws inside the switch.
If there are three or more switches controlling the same light(s), they are called four-way switches - more on those later. Let's first look more closely at three-way switches.
The circuit has to be wired in a special way, and not the way you might think. It might seem that two simple on-off switches and a light could be wired together one after the other. (See Figure 1.) This would be simple series wiring.
Figure 2. Switches in parallel.
But simple switches wired in series won't turn on the light unless both switches are turned on. What we want for the stairway is for each switch alone to be able to turn the light on or off, regardless of the other switch.
Simple switches in parallel won't work either. Wired that way, either switch could turn the light on. But to turn the light off, both switches would have to be off (See Figure 2.)
Three-way switches are installed in pairs. Each switch has three terminal screws - a darker common (C) and two travelers (T). The two traveler screws are interchangeable with each other. Different manufacturers put the common and traveler screws in various positions. For example, the terminal screw patterns in Figure 3 are electrically the same. This common terminal is connected to the black hot leg coming from the service panel.
There are two possible paths for electricity to take through a two-way switch. It's like a “Y” in a road; inside the switch, electricity goes from the single common terminal to either of the traveler terminals. Electricity will choose the direction where the switching position is closed. Either path takes the electricity to the next switch. There it again has two possible paths through the switch.
Figure 3. These different terminal screw patterns are electrically the same.
Three-way switches can be wired in three different configurations - the two switches before the light fixture, the light fixture between the two switches, or the light fixture before the two switches (see Figure 4).
Notice that there are three cables in each layout. A two-wire cable (black and white wires) always comes from the service panel.
A three-wire cable (black, red and white) always connects the two switches. Each of the two traveler screws on the first switch may be connected to either of the traveler screws on the second switch.
Depending upon the layout, the third cable may be either two-wire or three-wire.
Notice that, as with loads anywhere, there is always a black (hot) and white (neutral) wire connected to it. If you see two white wires, one is white coded black. That's because the cable doesn't always give you the colors you need. So if you have a white but need a black, you may designate the white as black by marking it with a piece of black tape or a black marker.
Figure 4. Three three-way switch layouts. Grounding is ommitted for drawing clarity.
Four-Way Switches
Some rooms, such as a kitchen or living room, have more than two entrances. For these we use four-way switches. Four-way means three or more switches. It's easy to move from the three-way switches we just looked at to four-way. Just add a four-way switch between the two three-ways. In fact, you can add as many four-way switches as you need.
Figure . Inside a four-way switch.
A four-way switch has four terminal screws as in Figure 5. The screws are in pairs. The pairing may vary by manufacturer, so it's important to look closely at the switch for which pair together. For our purposes here, we'll pair the upper two screws with each other and the lower screw with each other.
Here's a layout for three switches and a light fixture (Figure 6). It's a three-way switch layout with a four-way switch inserted between the three-ways.
Figure 6. A four-way switch inserts between the two three-way switches. Grounding is omitted for drawing clarity. Click image for larger view.
So now when you overhear those Monday morning conversations, “Man, I was trying to wire up a three-way switch this weekend, and wow, I just couldn't get the thing to work,” you'll know what's going on. The trick is you gotta have special three-way switches. Then the wiring's easy.
March 30, 2006
Carol Fey
Three-way switches - two switches controlling one light.
Figure 1. Switches in series. Click image for larger view.
Here's the switching scenario. You turn on the light at the bottom of the stairs before going up to bed. Once you get upstairs you turn the same light off from a switch at the top of the stairs. For years, maybe your whole life, you take it for granted that either switch turns the same light on or off. Then one day you try to help a buddy wire one in the house he's building. Whoa, this isn't your ordinary light-switch wiring situation! Neither of you can figure out how to make the wiring work. That's because it's not just the wiring. Three-way switches are special switches.
These switches at the top and bottom of the stairs are called three-way switches, even though there are only two of them. If you look closely at them, you'll see that there's no on-off marking like you find on a simple switch. That's because either position can be on or off.
“Three-way” means that there are three components in the circuit - two switches and the light(s). And there are three switch terminal screws inside the switch.
If there are three or more switches controlling the same light(s), they are called four-way switches - more on those later. Let's first look more closely at three-way switches.
The circuit has to be wired in a special way, and not the way you might think. It might seem that two simple on-off switches and a light could be wired together one after the other. (See Figure 1.) This would be simple series wiring.
Figure 2. Switches in parallel.
But simple switches wired in series won't turn on the light unless both switches are turned on. What we want for the stairway is for each switch alone to be able to turn the light on or off, regardless of the other switch.
Simple switches in parallel won't work either. Wired that way, either switch could turn the light on. But to turn the light off, both switches would have to be off (See Figure 2.)
Three-way switches are installed in pairs. Each switch has three terminal screws - a darker common (C) and two travelers (T). The two traveler screws are interchangeable with each other. Different manufacturers put the common and traveler screws in various positions. For example, the terminal screw patterns in Figure 3 are electrically the same. This common terminal is connected to the black hot leg coming from the service panel.
There are two possible paths for electricity to take through a two-way switch. It's like a “Y” in a road; inside the switch, electricity goes from the single common terminal to either of the traveler terminals. Electricity will choose the direction where the switching position is closed. Either path takes the electricity to the next switch. There it again has two possible paths through the switch.
Figure 3. These different terminal screw patterns are electrically the same.
Three-way switches can be wired in three different configurations - the two switches before the light fixture, the light fixture between the two switches, or the light fixture before the two switches (see Figure 4).
Notice that there are three cables in each layout. A two-wire cable (black and white wires) always comes from the service panel.
A three-wire cable (black, red and white) always connects the two switches. Each of the two traveler screws on the first switch may be connected to either of the traveler screws on the second switch.
Depending upon the layout, the third cable may be either two-wire or three-wire.
Notice that, as with loads anywhere, there is always a black (hot) and white (neutral) wire connected to it. If you see two white wires, one is white coded black. That's because the cable doesn't always give you the colors you need. So if you have a white but need a black, you may designate the white as black by marking it with a piece of black tape or a black marker.
Figure 4. Three three-way switch layouts. Grounding is ommitted for drawing clarity.
Four-Way Switches
Some rooms, such as a kitchen or living room, have more than two entrances. For these we use four-way switches. Four-way means three or more switches. It's easy to move from the three-way switches we just looked at to four-way. Just add a four-way switch between the two three-ways. In fact, you can add as many four-way switches as you need.
Figure . Inside a four-way switch.
A four-way switch has four terminal screws as in Figure 5. The screws are in pairs. The pairing may vary by manufacturer, so it's important to look closely at the switch for which pair together. For our purposes here, we'll pair the upper two screws with each other and the lower screw with each other.
Here's a layout for three switches and a light fixture (Figure 6). It's a three-way switch layout with a four-way switch inserted between the three-ways.
Figure 6. A four-way switch inserts between the two three-way switches. Grounding is omitted for drawing clarity. Click image for larger view.
So now when you overhear those Monday morning conversations, “Man, I was trying to wire up a three-way switch this weekend, and wow, I just couldn't get the thing to work,” you'll know what's going on. The trick is you gotta have special three-way switches. Then the wiring's easy.