How To Hide TV Power Cord And Cables | Easy Way To Move An Outlet
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I will walk through the ste-by-step process of moving an outlet to the back of your wall-mounted TV. The kicker is we will make it so you don't have to do any drywall repair or painting. Additionally, all the work will be completed in the room and you won't be going up in the attic or down in the basement.
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I am a contractor with over 30 years of experience in multiple trades, and I just wanted to compliment you on your very nicely demonstrated procedure. You articulate very well and your information is "refreshingly accurate"..a real benefit to people who would consult such videos of guidance on how to do something themselves, particularly if they have little or no experience at "do-it- yourself" tasks. Thank you, and Cheers to you, my friend!
@donwolfjr1
9 ай бұрын
I'm not a professional but I couldn't agree with you more on this video!!! I guess I'm gonna have to watch more of his videos now!!!
@NathanYount
7 ай бұрын
I agree that he articulates as well and is concise with good flow. A few more pointers: 1) Every home owner or contractor (up sell and QA opportunity) needs to keep documentation of any modifications or anytime you have to open a wall (especially if you do good work) that saves a ton of headache later and adds to resell value is to keep a notebook of modifications and where things are (digital is best so you can add photos easily). 2) Protection is a good idea such as nail plate or he used "Easy Guards" inside the stud which neither protect the Romex behind the dry wall not in studs like conduit which based on the location behind the floor trim isn't likely so documentation comes into play instead. 3) I agree with @No1Sonuk, always have cheap non conductive fire resistant string to add easy access cord pullers to tie to box/romex/cables. Tag it, you can buy 1000 of these for like $2, I bought the ones that double as anchors/mag guide compatible since tech is constantly upgraded, 500 for $8. 4) @EverydayHomeRepairs, A list of bare minimum common household tools and then recommended would be nice since you articulate so well and probably already have a database where you keep track of some of these things for analytics and recycling content, its a simple export paste or AI tool. 5)@gerrymcintosh4477, I agree, a quick mention of Spackle and printable chalk would have been good and can still refer to who you support for details. 6) Recessed box options: box extenders, angled nail Electrical Boxes, Sandwich style boxes, 2-gang Recessed TV Box (use generic search terms like low voltage or Multimedia Outlet for 3rd or half priced boxes compared to marked up marketing schemes), and pro tip of Outlet Spacers to bring to Code. 7) @chadm1978, agreed, clipping nails does take less time but I like to bend the nails or clip and grind if its not a big area. 8) @richarda3659, agreed quite often times TV's are mounted on an outside wall and a couple of considerations should be taken into account as well an insulation and house breathing air flow considerations where common thought would be to seal it up tight but extra considerations and tax benefits of updating insulation one room at a time might be very beneficial in which case your tax credit allowance.
@rexside
7 ай бұрын
A good salesman. Most videos promoting products l, some useless like this
@mariobe3674
2 ай бұрын
What happened to the horizontal 2X4 at 4 feet, holding straight the 2 studs?
@britishplumbing1
25 күн бұрын
Easy when u have dry wall. Also u should insulate your earth cables
I'm a 35 year electrician and this video shows an excellent example of how to add an electrical outlet behind a TV. Very well done!
@kevin5073
2 ай бұрын
My thoughts exactly. Simplest method always the best.
@gsp911
2 ай бұрын
7:07 Electrician or not, this is NOT the way to cut off the sheathing.
Another thing about this video, is that it show that's it possible. Which gives us a an incentive to call a professional to do it for us, if we are not comfortable to it ourself.
Your videos are always so informative, Scott. You not only show HOW to do the project but you also show WHAT tools work best to minimize my aggravation as a DIYer. Thanks so much.
I wish you would’ve shown the part most important to me…how you got the new Romex to the original outlet once you ran it through the two studs.
@BA-dx6sw
Жыл бұрын
Which is probably the most difficult part of the project.
@heclas
Жыл бұрын
Came to the comments to see if someone asked this!
@mattfleming86
Жыл бұрын
Fish tape.
@justme4172
Жыл бұрын
@@mattfleming86 But did he have to take that box out first to fish it up to the hole? Or did he fish it through a hole in the outlet box?
@jeffreyeaton5214
Жыл бұрын
I've always struggled to do this. I personally have just always found it easier to rip the old box out and put in an old work box with the cables routed into it(if next to a stud, I prefer getting the old/new work boxes that can be screwed into the stud from inside the box)
That's fantastic! It just didn't occur to me that pulling off the baseboard was the way to hide the rework. Much appreciated. 😊
I have been watching youtube for over 20 years this is a great demonstration on how to add an outlet
@EverydayHomeRepairs
Ай бұрын
Thanks for the support!
@XM394-xxx
8 күн бұрын
Bot. YT has only been around for 19 years
Great video. I recommend fishing the Romex through the original outlet first. Push all the Romex through the outlet, the studs, then using a line to pull it up to the new outlet hole. This saves the effort of blindly pushing the Romex into the original outlet.
@tompeters4234
2 ай бұрын
Exactly. Watching I liked how the romex magically came into the original box. That had to be a chore.
@lynneldridge7661
2 ай бұрын
It seemed he dropped the Romex from the new box, pushing it down the short distance to the original box. Am l correct??
@geoben9801
Ай бұрын
@@lynneldridge7661 Yes, that would be the best, most logical way to do it.👍 For whatever reason he didn't show that. 🤔
@Tee-19
Ай бұрын
@@tompeters4234 yes I kept re-watching and looking for the part of how the Romex suddenly appeared behind original box
@hoperules8874
28 күн бұрын
I wondered how he magically got that wire into the original box! Wouldn't he need to break a new tab off in the back to fit it in?
Just wow. So informative, and looks great. Love that it all is safe, and no "shortcuts".
Thanks for this! New homeowner and new to electrical home edits and have two mounted TVs I need an outlet for! Love seeing all the contractor and electrician seal of approvals on here easing my mind that I won’t accidentally burn my house down over time❤️❤️❤️
I'm not 100% sure I'll end up moving an outlet for my application, but wanted to see a few videos on how to do it just to have it as an option. This is by far the simplest and most clear to follow video I've seen. Thanks.
I appreciate you highlighting all of the tools you use and the links where to buy them. Nothing is more frustrating than seeing a great video but not knowing where the buy the necessary tools to make the job easier. Another great video Scott.
@SeanBlader
3 ай бұрын
As a DIYer, it's not even just knowing where to find tools, but even knowing said tools exist, which is something you just pick up on over the years. I can't even count the number of times I've said, "holy crap there's a tool for that?"
Great video! One tip as a painter I can offer is use “painters putty” in place of caulk for the nail holes.
Excellent video & workmanship. In my 50+ years as electrician, I:ve done thousands of similar installs & you layout the work perfectly.
Nice work, I have been putting off running wire behind the wall mounted tv for over a year and this path just encouraged me to go ahead and complete it
Nice work, easy to follow! Thanks for the tip on removing the base trim, that is the best time saver.
@drophammer776
2 ай бұрын
When using pry-bar place a 1/4" board between the wall and pry-bar so you don't gouge the wall from pressure point with pry-bar. Try and put prybar right above where trim nails are located so the trim doesn't split.
Very nice video. I’m glad to don’t spend several minutes showing all the mundane steps, but rather you kept the flow of the essential information moving at an enjoyable pace. Super well done Sir. BTW, I use spackling to cover those brad holes and Alex Plus “paintable” caulk. Wish you well with your KZread channel. 🇨🇦💝
@NathanYount
7 ай бұрын
I agree, a quick mention of Spackle and printable chalk would have been good and can still refer to who you support for details.
You are a wonderful teacher! I knew almost nothing about electrical aspects & after your clear, ego-less explanation, I know I could do this. Thanks!
Nice job showing the difference on how to be able to gather all the wiring and the spacer on the plus on screws.
Beautifully filmed and edited; it's all business, no cutesy stuff. Excellent educational standards. I am subscribed!
@visiprac
Жыл бұрын
Yes. Cutesy stuff gets in the way. The directions flow well and are easy to follow.
Am I the only one wondering how you got the new wire up and into the existing box? You skipped that part. Overall a very good and concise video. I like your work.
@ronicreates1319
21 күн бұрын
I noticed that too. How did he fish the wire from the top box to the floor?
@garychandler4296
13 күн бұрын
Feed from the box TO the floor.
I was thinking there is no way you can do this without ripping up the wall. And you did it. I am stunned 😳
You are the Man. The best installation person on you tube ,make the job so clean and Easy thank you
This is actually a brilliant idea, versus cutting dry wall, and having to redo it all. Nicely done...
@EverydayHomeRepairs
Жыл бұрын
👍
Nice!! I was suspicious of the claim to be able to run this wiring without drywall repair or painting. But, I'd never even thought of going behind the baseboard like that. Very clever!
You did a great job there. Lucky to have drywall and studs. Most older houses here in UK would be plastered walls or perhaps dot and dab drywall so chasing out walls needed. 😳 Its also regs here to sleeve the earth wires so no bare conductors are showing. I like those cable protection inserts. Great idea. 👍🇬🇧
The cleanliness at the end 🤩. I can't think of a more beautiful thing
I use wago connectors because of your videos. Easiest, most useful way to wire anything. Thanks for a great video. Super useful.
@EverydayHomeRepairs
2 ай бұрын
Totally agree and thanks for the feedback!
One tip WRT the second wall plate you showed for HDMI, etc. cables is that if you use two, run a long piece of string between them for running extra cables later. Make it at least twice as long as the gap + 2 feet, with a loop knot tied in the middle. This can then be used to easily pull cables between the two holes.
@NathanYount
7 ай бұрын
I agree, always have cheap non conductive fire resistant string to add easy access cord pullers to tie to box/romex/cables. You can buy tags for it, you can buy 1000 of these for like $2, I bought the ones that double as anchors/mag guide compatible since tech is constantly upgraded, 500 for $8.
@merrellwilliams9500
3 ай бұрын
Huh?
I know the goal was not major paint or drywall repair, but just have to add, the look, fit, and finish of a recessed box can be so nice when it comes to TVs. Absolutely love them on my installs! Definitely great content from the perspective of a low voltage guy though.
You made that look effortless!! Great job!! I actually have a spot in my living room that I have enough confidence to tackle now!! Thank you buddy!!!
I'm intriqued that the originating outlet has the grounds just twisted together, no wirenuts!! Have a house built around 1968, all the original outlets are that way. Whenever I've had the need to change an outlet, I'll replace all of them in a room, and make good ground connections. And WAGO 221's are the BOMB for this! Solid, fast, and easier than nuts.
@johncrunk8038
2 ай бұрын
Twisting the ground wires is actually more secure than using wire nuts. But Wago is much nicer.
@natehoy6924
2 ай бұрын
Seems to be a standard around here. Almost every installation I have seen has had all the ground conductors twisted into a group. The good part is that you know the ground conductors have really good contact, but it's a real mess of copper in the back of the box. I'm 50/50 on cleaning it up or just leaving the thing that works alone, depending on the nature of the work I'm doing and how much energy I have to "correcting" it (I use quotes because twisting all the ground wires together tightly is a really reliable connection, so it's not wrong).
@charlesgleason7566
2 ай бұрын
@@natehoy6924 I can see it being 'standard' but is it to code according to the time the house was built? And once seen, should it be left like this? I live in a house built about 1968, like most other houses in my neighborhood. I've lost count of the # of outlet boxes where twisting the grounds was done, which I then corrected to wire nuts (and now wago's). When we remodeled out kitchen I was very diligent about this;
@Marie-cu7ur
Ай бұрын
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You explained this so well I feel confidant I could pull this off by myself 😌
@wendyandmatthew8637
Жыл бұрын
did you?
@mctooch
Жыл бұрын
@@wendyandmatthew8637 😂😂
This kind of detail is what really makes a space come alive. Awesome
Outstanding! I have had his problem many times and did not have a simple solution like this. Thank you.
Awesome! Great job! But we rarely have dry walls in our country. They're mostly made of concrete, bricks or CMUs. So it's much more harder to do the same job here. Thanks for the video!
@RandomRads
Жыл бұрын
You have to just dig through the concrete.
@stacy4711
Жыл бұрын
I have wet plaster, what tool would work on t hat?
11:57 -- Highly recommend filling those gaps with caulking especially if you have ant problems like I do Looks fantastic! Great work
@EverydayHomeRepairs
Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@conniecostner9665
3 ай бұрын
Big facts. I have huge problems with stink bugs. OMG. I hate them!
This is a great video. I was going to go this but cutting the drywall. This will now be a much easier installation. Thanks.
Awesome video! One tip I recommend is to start at the existing outlet and feed your wire down to the baseboards. Then pull it to the newly created outlet hole. Before you put the old work box in, feed the wire through the box and then place the box in the hole and secure. Doing this method is way easier and you get the perfect length of wire. He didn’t show how he got the perfect length of wire. If you do it his method you have to estimate how much wire you need because it’s way harder to feed the wire coming the opposite direction into the tine hole in the existing outlet box. Let alone other wires coming into it. Outlet boxes also have built in strain relief(the angled plastic you push out of the way) so it makes it even more difficult to pull wires out of the box from the other direction which also makes it more challenging, if you do his method, trying to fish it up into the existing box. Long story short, save yourself time and frustration starting from the existing outlet and work to the new one.
Really useful video. I recently wall mounted our TV with the plan to install an outlet behind it. That said, there are "in wall TV power kits" (LeGrand makes several) for behind the TV outlets which have you install two faceplates; one behind the TV with a receptacle that the TV (and soundbar if present) plug into, and one at outlet level near the floor with male prongs, and the two are connected in the wall cavity via a cord. You then run what's essentially a short extension cord from a nearby electrical outlet to the male prongs on the new floor outlet, which energizes the outlet behind the TV. Many of these kits include a non-electrical cord pass through molded into the faceplates for HDMI cables to game consoles, blu-ray players, etc. You wouldn't need to remove the trim, remove drywall screws, cut the strip of drywall away, cut power, remove and re-wire the existing outlet and the new outlet, reattach drywall and trim, spackle and repaint the trim, etc. You just need to cut two holes for the faceplates and fish the included in-wall cord from hole to hole. The one downside I can think of -- if you don't have a media center or other furniture below the TV, you'd see the short power cord running sideways from an existing outlet over to the new faceplate near floor level with male prongs. In theory, it's more expensive to buy one of these kits than buying an outlet but if you need to buy a trim pry tool, 15' of 12-2 romex, Wagos, wirestripper, etc. it will actually end up significantly cheaper for a DIYer on a budget. The only tools required would be a level and a drywall jab saw or multi-tool to cut out the holes for the faceplates.
@FHL-Devils
Жыл бұрын
Agreed, the recessed kits are the way to go, and an opportunity to run an HDMI cable down the same cavity with no actual additional work was a big miss. Even if not going with a recessed KIT, it should have been a recessed OUTLET so the TV could fit flat to the wall with a standard plug. It was a good DIY video, but a terrible AV/Tech video.
@davidp6839
Жыл бұрын
@@FHL-Devils He mentions the junction box at the end for additional wiring. Guess he just had no need so didn't do it here.
@FHL-Devils
Жыл бұрын
@@davidp6839 - Except that it's against code to have 120 and Low/No voltage wiring in the same box. There would be no viable way to create an HDMI / Optical run without repeating the process almost from scratch.
@davidp6839
Жыл бұрын
@@FHL-Devils Looked like a separate box/plate, so wires would be separate. More of a cover than a box, just access for AV wiring.
@richarda3659
Жыл бұрын
@@FHL-Devils Yeah he simplified it by claiming the TV didn't need HDMI any more because all content was being streamed wirelessly over WiFi, which is fine when that's the case, but a lot of times it isn't, and then it gets more complicated.
This is great for situations where you don't have an outlet directly below your t.v. location. But the edge of the t.v. was directly above the outlet you pulled power from. So all you had to do was cut a j-bix sized hole behind the t.v. and run your new wire to your new j-box and outlet. Or you could have placed your new outlet on the other side of the stud from the old outlet and drilled your hole through the stud at that location.
@Mantis858585
Жыл бұрын
This is what I do. 👍
@alvinb.3024
Жыл бұрын
Exactly no need to move Trim for this task..
@MarkTubeG
7 ай бұрын
Beat me to it. Exactly how I did it in my home. There is no need to have the plug centered behind the TV, it just needs to be _anywhere_ behind the TV. Arguably, it's much better being closer to one side or the other of the TV, so that you can simply reach your hand a short way in from the side to unplug it, if need be, without unmounting the entire TV.
@pauldamo1679
6 ай бұрын
i was going to say the same thing,no need to pull trim and drill holes in studs.
@edeaglehouse2221
5 ай бұрын
How would you get the other end of the electrical cable routed to the other outlet (safely) if you didn't drill through the intervening studs?
Great video and so clear. I never thought to go behind the base board but genius. I unfortunately have the fireplace so I will have to cut some holes behind TV but cover up with redesign
I like how you took precautions for safety with the romax covers in the studs. Only paint would be on the trim which really could just be filled in with caulking. Nice video
Nice video. In the UK we have noggins between the uprights in our stud walls which would make this a whole lot harder but I loved the approach of just removing the skirting board and doing the cleve work behind that. Great work but UK plug sockets are the best and a whole lot safer
@zigzagzaag
Жыл бұрын
I always hate when my scuddilywumpus gets in the way of my didgeridoo.
@crazykittenvideos855
Жыл бұрын
@Phillip Banes fair points.
@MrKlawUK
Жыл бұрын
I’m a little surprised the walls woudln’t have noggins (or cross braces) at intervals. The height of a wall is a long way without bracing. Is it assumed the dry wall is doing that job?
@MrKlawUK
Жыл бұрын
what gauge is that wire? Seems pretty heavy duty for a regular 110v socket which I guess you’re normally only ever pulling 1.5kw off?
@Mark.Watson
Жыл бұрын
@@MrKlawUK 12 Gauge
Intro: no dry wall cutting. Proceeds to cut dry wall 😂😂
@noman6583
3 ай бұрын
To be fair he technically said no drywall *repair* and none was required!
I am not even planing such a project and yet I watched the whole thing out of curiosity. Nice workmanship
I have mounted many like this. However, I usually run romex thru back of lower outlet first then thru smaller holes in bottom of wall studs.Then it is easier to run the romex up thru the large space in wall and easy to grab at upper hole before installing new box. The wago do work well. Other than that, we both do the rest the same. Great video.
@EverydayHomeRepairs
Жыл бұрын
Thanks 👊
@JD-USA
Жыл бұрын
Why not run romex from the top and let gravity help you out?
I'm amazed how in the US internal walls are made with studwork and drywall. No wonder they blow over when there's a bit of wind.
What a slick way to run those wires. I learned several new techniques from your video. Thank you!
Excellent!! I just learned something new! not that I'll ever install one, but I'll know if whoever I hire is doing it right! thank you!!
Easy guard is a cool addition. One of my first thoughts was the risk of shooting a trim nail into the wire.
@richarda3659
Жыл бұрын
Especially because the trim nails go into the studs pretty much exactly where the Romex passes through them. I'd almost think to use industrial adhesive on the back of the floor molding instead of nails, as that would be far safer, though more difficult to remove later on if it became necessary..I also felt the 1.25" holes drilled through the studs might unnecessarily compromise the structural integrity of the studs.
Awesome job! In a perfect world the upper outlet would be in the same bay as the lower so you could just run fish tape to pull it up. I love Wago connectors. They are so great and are game changers. Thanks for posting.
@adm5163
Жыл бұрын
Question for those wago connectors. This is my first time seeing them and I know very little about electrical. How do those switches know where to run power? Because wasn't that outlet a 4 way? (I believe 4 ways just mean it ties into something else in line, another putler or switch). When he did the 3 together into the wago and only 1 out, how does that affect the other things in line? Because if you wire them wrong the tester will say hot reversed/neutral reversed /etc. Love the idea but just bought a new house and while ill drop the money right now to do this, I don't wanna burn my house down lol
@Brian-Burke
Жыл бұрын
@@adm5163 So you have one black wire that brings power to the right outlet. When you connect it to a Wago with other black wires, those all are now energized, so the black wire that's going to the new outlet now has power. He branched off a single wire to the outlet on the right to energize it. It's the same principle with the neutrals and grounds. When connected with a Wago, they are unified, probably a better word, and all serve the same function. Any help?
@adm5163
Жыл бұрын
@@Brian-Burke thank you and sorry I may have phrased that wrong. I understand that it unifies them (which is awesome and easy). But let's say in my home I do this, and there's 4 wires coming off the back of an outlet. 1 set is coming in to power the outlet and 1 set is going out to power something else correct? My question is why does it matter which wire goes where without the wago but when you use one it doesn't seem to affect the incoming/outgoing (polarity?) wires?
@buggsy5
2 ай бұрын
It does matter, regardless of whether you use Wagos or wire nuts. All a Wago does is provides an easy way to pigtail two or more wires together. When an outlet is in a string that feeds just feeds on to the next box, the electrician will often use the two provided brass screws to fasten the two black wires and the two silver screws to fasten the neutral wires. In this circuit, he was adding an outlet in parallel, so there will be three black wires, three white wires and 3 ground wires. This requires pigtailing to fasten all wires properly.
I'm supposed to get ready for work but I'm watching this video. LOL! Nice work.
Great video. Excellent directions. Only thing I would add is directions on getting romex into the existing box. I’m gonna check out those inserts.
Make sure to check your local state requirements for how high the cable needs to run from the floor. In California its 16 inches to prevent electrocution from standing water. The Romex cable I coated but I wouldn't take any chances.
@shmellit123
Жыл бұрын
Some require any addition to a circuit be ARC fault or GFCI protected. Source outlet gets swapped. (Worse yet, some counties require the breaker then be ARC/GFCI. Gets fun if you have a Zinsco. Your little project just got expensive)
@shmellit123
Жыл бұрын
....... And nail plates on the studs. Next guy to come along to do a higher profile baseboards is going to shoot brads through that Romex.
@anonymous.369
8 ай бұрын
@@shmellit123he used EZ Guard thru the studs.
@buggsy5
2 ай бұрын
I doubt if they are as puncture resistant as standard protective plates. @@anonymous.369
Technically, when you put the piece of drywall back in place, you did drywall repair. Also, this fix only worked because your trim was tall enough for drilling and cutting the drywall. Under the very limited conditions, good work. I think I would have sealed around the drywall cut.
Some of the best DIY videos on KZread.
Thanx for the video. That created an incredibly clean way to handle power cords and HDMI cables.
I was just going to ask the same thing as Clyde; what do you do if there's insulation in the wall? Often the wall is insulated, because TVs are likely to get mounted on an outside wall. But this was a very cool idea and I'm impressed with how clean the results were. Yeah, you'll have to fill the nail holes and touch them up with matching paint.
@lombas3185
Жыл бұрын
Then you are better off just using clips in the wall. You won't be able to completely hide them, but the result will be much cleaner
@guttagutta420
11 ай бұрын
And re-caulk it
@hansangb
10 ай бұрын
They make strong magnets with a leader on it. You can tie a pull rope to the leader (search AMZN for MAGNEPULL XP1000-6), then from the outside of the drywall, you put another strong rare earth magnet and just walk the magnet up. It'll pull the magnet right up the wall pushing the insulation out of the way. Or you can buy a pull (fish) rod that's flexible. Tie a pull rope to it and push it from the new junction box (at the top) and push it down to where the trim was. Untie the pull rope and us it to pull the new romex.
@NathanYount
7 ай бұрын
agreed quite often times TV's are mounted on an outside wall and a couple of considerations should be taken into account as well an insulation and house breathing air flow considerations where common thought would be to seal it up tight but extra considerations and tax benefits of updating insulation one room at a time might be very beneficial in which case your tax credit allowance.
I've run into blocks between the studs inside the wall before. That can definitely make the job take longer. Had to get an extra long spade bit to deal with that.
@EverydayHomeRepairs
Жыл бұрын
For sure, I need more practice with those flexible auger bits.
@ericedelman
Жыл бұрын
I guess if the block winds up being right in the middle, you might have no choice but to cut more drywall.
@newlinerealboi3434
Жыл бұрын
In UK there’s pretty much always a horizontal timber halfway up each gap.
@donaldlee6760
Жыл бұрын
Same here - I just give up and cut another hole in the drywall for my right-angle drill bit adapter and then patch the extra hole.
@gary3046
Жыл бұрын
Never seen a house without fireblocks between studs half way between the floor and the ceiling.
I had no idea that "wago"s existed. Now I see that's the WAY TO GO! I have a 4 gang box with ooodles of size 12 wires and the big red nuts crammed in. I had to push against the opposite wall to get the faceplate flush so I could screw it in place. Then the nightlight quit working after a couple of weeks. I've been dreading taking it out... now I believe I'll swap nuts for wagos, put in a GFCI outlet (more of the heavy wires) in that spot and use a disposable" plug in nightlight. Thanks so much!
I see from these videos that I need an oscillating saw (never knew what they were for) and nail gun. Didn't know what Romex is when first mentioned. Liked the trim remover. I had a helper remove some with screwdriver and really damaged the wall.😢 Didn't know trim was caulked. Lots to learn.
good video. I never thought about doing it behind the baseboards, too. One thing I got confused on was how you pulled the wire up from the baseboard to the old outlet. Those are closed boxes and you didn't show that final step in running the wire, which was the only one I didn't know how to do.
@anonymous.369
8 ай бұрын
kzread.info/dash/bejne/oIuap6OHirK_g84.htmlsi=vjsvPlQSpHb35Ire
I love the video overall. It was slick and easy to follow. I also am REALLY glad to know about Easy Guard and the trim pooling tool. Thanks! I do however two items of concern. First, you didn't show what (for me) is the hardest part of the operation and one that I don't know how to do. How did you snake/pull the romex up into the old outlet junction box? That can be a little bit of a pain without the drywall in the way. To the best of my knowledge, this was (quite literally?) the only thing you didn't show in the video. Second, electrical codes. Isn't Romex supposed to be secured to the studs? And secured within 8-12" of the box at the TV? I don't think it is supposed to be just running up, inside the wall up to the TV outlet you installed. Please advise.
@wwolfram33
Жыл бұрын
I wanted to see that as well.
@richarda3659
Жыл бұрын
This was a DIY project with (relatively speaking) very low current draw, and while I agree that this technique may not strictly meet code in all States, it's probably quite safe regardless, especially on what was presumably an inside, non load-bearing wall.
@bigben0873
Жыл бұрын
@@richarda3659 So, codes are just gentle guidelines that one can choose to ignore when one feels they are not necessary? I won't say that I have been 100% code compliant on every DIY project that I have ever done. However to not say anything at all about codes in the video is a concern, I think. 20 years ago, I wouldn't have even known to ask the code question. And, someone might 'leverage' this video and the technique to do something more dangerous than what was shown here.
@buggsy5
2 ай бұрын
There are differences in the NEC between new and old work. Is there a different requirement for wire securing that is old work?
It is instructive that you're willing to run the Romex up into the wall without stapling to the studs, which code would require. I guess any port in a storm. Gives me some enthusiasm for a project I have been putting off.
@buggsy5
2 ай бұрын
I believe the fastening requirements are relaxed for old work.
I loved the way you explained how to do the job. I have little experience in electrical. I will use this video on my Laptop & replay as much as possible until I have it right. Thank you for sharing. David C
@EverydayHomeRepairs
2 ай бұрын
You bet, best of luck with your project 👍
Looking forward to this
On this and some past videos, you're always working on interior walls. Things get a lot more complicated when it's an exterior wall with insulation and VB. Would like to see how you address that at some point. Thanks!
@jeffh4505
Жыл бұрын
and getting around fire blocks
@quehendricks
Жыл бұрын
@@jeffh4505 I like to drill through the fire block with a 1" holesaw (1 3/8 OD) about an inch and a half, No worry of sheetrock screws at that depth. Sheetrock repair is nothing more than drywall patch from Home Depot
@12centuries40
Жыл бұрын
@@quehendricks is drywall patch fire-resistant?
@freedom1028
Жыл бұрын
Excellent video from a guy who really knows his stuff. Thank you.
@saschawittig328
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, same here. All my walls a concrete, w/o cable cuts.
Love the Amazon link, I do pretty well I figuring out how to learn things but finding the right tools is a challenge
Thanks so much for this.. I wanted to do this but figured that I would need to hire an electrician! Appreciate that you are saving me money!
I live in a Florida home with Romex wiring and I've dropped wires down the wall to add outlets. Personally I think removing the baseboards going to create more work especially when it's been caulked and painted. To each his own.
The only thing I would add is that when you're cutting thru the drywall do not go too deep as the outlet might be wired from below and not above you don't want to hit the wire feeding the outlet. Also in the case where there are 6 wires check the way the outlet is setup, it might be split and being fed by 2 separate circuits. IE each of the outlets might have its own breaker.
@buggsy5
2 ай бұрын
He checked both outlets to verify neither had power.
construction all my life. I'm 69 years old. done a lot of electrical. never would of thought of that nor never seen it. That was cool as hell
Excellent demonstration! I’m ready to get a few of these done.
Depending on your TV, the wall mount, and the plug for the TV you made need a media box rather than a regular old work box. They are deep and sunken in 2 gang boxes that allow you to mount a receptacle and the low voltage pass through wall plate you showed at the end side by side. It's needed if you dont have enough room behind the TV if its mounted nearly flush to the wall.
@WallyFuller
6 ай бұрын
Those boxes are pricey at $25-35 (USD). If you had a flat screen in multiple rooms that can be a little much.
It looks easy enough. Maybe I missed this, but how do you push the wires up from the baseboard to the old outlet?
@robertf4209
9 ай бұрын
Probably fished it through and likely was a PITA. Might have been easier to start by threading through the existing box. But hindsight is 20:20. This was a great video and explanation !
@buggsy5
2 ай бұрын
Neither fish tape nor fish rod are difficult to use. The only time there might be a problem is if there were fire breaks part way up the studs. @@robertf4209
Nice job and you showed every step. Thank you. So much cleaner!
Very professionally done! Very clear instruction. Thank you!
In the USA, Yellow jacket wire is 12 gauge and used for higher amp circuits, usually in the kitchen for powering toasters, blenders, can openers, mixers, etc. You can use white jacket 14 gauge wire instead just like the wires entering the box below. It won’t change amount of power to the tv, it’s just overkill. Nice job!
@joeweatlu5169
5 ай бұрын
Usual practice is to use 20 A circuit for receptacles and 15 A for lighting.
@slosh2448
4 ай бұрын
I was thinking the exact same thing. I was also taught to never back plug the outlet. Always put ‘em under the screw. As well as those plugs for the pigtail. I don’t always trust those. Always twist em with a pigtail and wire nut them together.. I’ve never seen those outlet spacers either nor had to pull off the tabs unless working with a metal box like a 1900 or so on .
@LMB829
2 ай бұрын
@@joeweatlu5169new nec code does not allow the use of 14 awg wire anymore. Min is 12 for all 15 and 20a circuits.
@joeweatlu5169
2 ай бұрын
@@LMB829 not even for lighting circuits?
@joeweatlu5169
2 ай бұрын
I don't know if it's code or not, but I was told by an electrician that it isn't good practice to use different gauge wire on the same circuit, even if using 12ga. on an existing 15 A. circuit using 14 ga. wire.
So when you ran the wire up the wall there wasn't a toe going from both studs?
@EverydayHomeRepairs
Жыл бұрын
No fire blocking in this wall. If there was you would have to use a flexible auger bit which can take some practice to not just damage the drywall.
I wish the UK electric code was as easy as this ... brilliant job I have adopted your amazing video to done my job many thanks 😊
So apparently I am behind the times in electrical installations. (DIY’er) I am excited to see these push in connectors, turns a conundrum into a easy peasy work load. Thank you.
This is not easy
@Assembledonetwo
Ай бұрын
I would rather leave it as it is lol
@zombieassasin4205
Ай бұрын
That’s funny I just thought “this seems easy enough” then I look down at comments & see this lol
@maryjomccallister9102
Ай бұрын
It is easy. Just take your time. I'm an over 60 woman and I did it with my bedroom tv. Also ran speaker wires in our living room for our ancient surround sound system.
@isaiahjackson4010
Ай бұрын
It's not particularly exhausting or strenuous maybe some tedium. Though
@beto2893
Ай бұрын
Mrchaker13's channel has an easier video, you don't have to change or connect electricity cables.
The video says to run 12/2 Romex. However, you should use whatever size wire is in the box you're extending from. If you have 14 gauge wire in the current box, then run 14/2 Romex. When he gets to where he pulls the receptacle out of the old box and pulls on the wires, you'll see the current wires have a yellow sheathing on them. So, his current box is 12 gauge. 14 gauge Romex has a white sheathing.
@stargazer7644
Жыл бұрын
12/2 being yellow is optional, and has only been a thing since 2001. So it is possible to still find 12/2 that is white.
@DJSubAir
Жыл бұрын
I was wondering why 12/2
@harvey66616
Жыл бұрын
If all you've got handy is 12/2, there's no harm in using the larger-gauge wiring in place of 14/2.
@DJSubAir
Жыл бұрын
@@harvey66616 I guess
@harvey66616
Жыл бұрын
@@DJSubAir Though, I did see later in the comments, the original wiring was on a 20A breaker with 12/2 wiring throughout. So in this case, he was just matching what was already there.
Great video, and Amazing skills showing that if you take your time, anyone could do a job like this just as good as any other contractor..
Hi, Very complete and detailed video! I just wanted to point that the electrical outlet behind the tv should be placed on a different spot because once you put the tv back up, the power cord will be on the way of the arms and the Tv will not go all the way against the wall. Once again very Professional job , detailed, clean and easy to understand
The most difficult part of this, at least for me, is how to get the romex from the floor up to and through the box. I also think opening a hole in the box already in the wall may not be easy. You kinda skipped those steps.
@justme4172
Жыл бұрын
You’re exactly spot on correct!!!
@DavidNeedham
Жыл бұрын
I'd also appreciate seeing this.
@JohnArnoldPhotography
Жыл бұрын
Me too!
@ianbutler1983
Жыл бұрын
Paul, I have about 12" of chain, like the stuff on a basement light socket, tied to 8 feet of string. I drop it down, and easily grab it at the bottom, then tie it to the Romex and pull it back up. I always try to go down, not up, for my first action.
@stephenlea5765
Жыл бұрын
Wouldn’t you just feed it from the box down to the ground & fish it out of the opening behind the baseboard?
Its funny watching those videos as an European. Cardboard homes. Try doing that in here :P
@Nairb3060
14 күн бұрын
Ik denk precies hetzelfde😂
@tomcharleville3136
10 күн бұрын
Most Americans OWN their homes, while most Europeans rent.
@zeroblade6599
9 күн бұрын
Do all Americans have hollow walls like this? No wonder shit breaks with every big storm
A nice demonstration, but a little quick hooking up your outlets. It seemed like you both had the live wire and neutral on the same screw. Thanks for the recommendations and I am going to try this
Beautiful work. I think I could do this. I'll keep you posted if I bump into anything. Thanks.
That's all fine and well if they are interior walls. If they're exterior walls with blow-in insulation covered with plastic vapor barrier it gets a whole lot more difficult. It would also be nice if you showed how you fished the wire up into the existing box. I like the technique but in some walls it won't be that easy. I see I'm not the only one with this concern.
@robo7981
Жыл бұрын
(Great video:) Same here. How did you fish the new wire into the existing box? Thanks...
@jeffjiegao
10 ай бұрын
I think it is easier to push the new wire from the existing box into the wall and fish it up to the new outlet hole before installing the new box.
@anonymous.369
8 ай бұрын
kzread.info/dash/bejne/oIuap6OHirK_g84.htmlsi=vjsvPlQSpHb35Ire
I must be amazingly unlucky because EVERY time I run wires through a wall (which I've done many, many times), I encounter blocking between the studs. Funny how KZreadrs never seem to have that problem :-)
@livens100
Жыл бұрын
Most houses in the US built in the 90's and later won't have blocking. But if your house does then the only option is to locate the block and drill a hole through it just like he did across the studs. It will require a drywall patch and paint though :). And even worse than blocking... lathe and chicken wire instead of drywall :). I have family that live in a house built in the 60's and doing anything electrical in that house is a nightmare.
@dpfreedman
Жыл бұрын
@@livens100 ALL of the houses around here (2000 on) do indeed have blocking in the walls. Must be a code requirement. I long ago bought a flexible installer's bit which has helped but not eliminated the need for drywall surgery. And, our prior house was a 1931 plaster and lathe beauty. Working on that one really helped build my vocabulary :-)
This video was so well done, excellent workmanship and made it look so easy!
Excellent video. Love that you clean up as you go along.
I would love to see you do this project in an older house with plaster and lath walls.
@tollav
Жыл бұрын
That's not what he is showing how to do. On today's episode I'm going to show you how to build a small 2 room mother in law suite. Awwww man i would like to see him build a 20 high rise.......
@timothysingenstreu8595
Жыл бұрын
I know that is why I would like to see it.
@tollav
Жыл бұрын
Ahhhhhhh I took your comment as the standard KZread armchair quarter backing. Apologies you get a thumbs up lol
Pretty classic approach to this problem. Doesn't work so well when the wall you'd need to drill through is concrete with just drywall and plaster over it. Conduit time...
@EverydayHomeRepairs
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, that would be a bit tougher. A lot of the guys from Europe usually give some grief that our US houses are made out of paper 😂
Love the wagu connectors! Saved my but on a smart switch install.
This is a nice project for a DiY homeowner. A few things to remember: (1) always be careful where you lay your tools. Drill bits can get very hot. If you have carpet and lay the bit down after use, it might melt your carpet or burn your hard wood (2) this project applies best to interior walls that tend to have empty wall cavities. If your TV is on an outside wall, it will be full of insulation which could make a mess or make fishing the wire in the wall much more difficult. (3) be sure to watch his other videos that show how to properly install a receptacle. The one he pulled out of the wall was NOT installed to code and should not be used as an example of a properly installed receptacle. He fixed the problems when reinstalling it.
I mean if the outlet is below the tv, can’t I just run the wires straight up? Yes the outlet behind the tv will be off to the side but it’s still gonna be behind the tv.
@EverydayHomeRepairs
Жыл бұрын
Yep, that would work and might not even have to remove the trim/drywall. I would remove the lower box, cut the hole behind the tv and fish the new wire down.
Make sure you trace the BACK of the box, NOT the front so ears can grab the drywall 😊
@EverydayHomeRepairs
Жыл бұрын
Oh man, yeah that would be a bummer. 🤦♂️
@pdrey100
Жыл бұрын
Tell that to my dad. I have been slowly correcting all his F ups.