I have basic experience installing switches, dimmers, outlets in my home; I am not an electrician.
My brother recently had a light that was not working and asked me to take a look. I have a basic question about this:
When I connected the hot wire and neutral to the light fixture wiring: the light does not work. But if I touch neutral coming from lamp fixture to metal casing the light works.
Why does this happen, I thought it should be a closed circuit.
I checked for power on the switch and it was receiving 120v.
Checking the circuit from the hot and neutral wires in the light casing, it registers very low voltage, which tells me the neutral is not circulating appropriately.
My question though is, why does the metal casing keep the light on?
Thanks for your help
My brother recently had a light that was not working and asked me to take a look. I have a basic question about this:
When I connected the hot wire and neutral to the light fixture wiring: the light does not work. But if I touch neutral coming from lamp fixture to metal casing the light works.
Why does this happen, I thought it should be a closed circuit.
I checked for power on the switch and it was receiving 120v.
Checking the circuit from the hot and neutral wires in the light casing, it registers very low voltage, which tells me the neutral is not circulating appropriately.
My question though is, why does the metal casing keep the light on?
Thanks for your help