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Ungrounded Electrical Outlets

By
Home Inspector with Axium Inspections, LLC NACHI#107052309

Ungrounded outlets are a safety hazard and are in violation of the building and national wiring codes. They need be made safe immediately.

Newer Wiring
In homes where all the outlets were installed with a ground, any failure of the ground must be corrected by replacing the failing outlet, or replacing and/or reconnecting the ground wire. In many cases the open ground on one outlet is the result of a disconnected wire at another outlet. A wire disconnected from one outlet will disconnect the ground service from all the outlets down line.

Older Wiring
In older homes the original wiring did not have ground wire connected to the outlets. These ungrounded outlets are easily distinguished by their two hole / slot configuration verses the newer grounded type of outlet that has three holes / slots.

Ungrounded outlets that have two holes / slots used in a home that was originally wired in this manner and has not been rewired are considered acceptable.

Where the Problem Begins
The problems for the owners of older homes start when grounded type outlets are substituted for the ungrounded type without the necessary rewiring that adds a ground wire to the new three prong grounded type outlet.

Grounded type (three hole / slot) outlets may not be substituted for ungrounded outlets unless a ground wire is connected. An exception to this rule is allowed by the National Electric Code, when the outlet is protected by a ground fault interrupter (GFI or GFCI).

The Fixes
There are two fixes available for those home owners who do not want to rewire the entire house.

The first fix uses Ground Fault Interrupters. There are two types of GFI available, one takes the place of the regular circuit breaker in the load center. The second type that is available takes the place of the standard outlet and replaces it with a special GFI protected outlet. These are commonly used in the kitchens and bathrooms of newer homes. Most people know them for their black and red reset buttons.

The second fix. In many older homes the outlet mounting box was grounded but the outlet was not, if this the case it is possible to use a jumper between the mounting box and the grounding screw on the new grounded type outlet. 

This type of ground may not be adequate for surge protectors. (see below)

Surge Protectors
A surge protector plugged into an ungrounded outlet will not operate as the manufacturer intended. When a large surge or spike hits, the surge protector uses the ground wire to take the "hit" away from the protected equipment and send it safely to ground. If the surge or spike is not sent to ground by the surge protector it will destroy the delicate electronics you were trying to protect. The warranty offered by the surge protectors manufacturer offer, is only valid if the surge protector is used in a properly grounded outlet.

Colorado Home Inspection

Jim Frimmer
HomeSmart Realty West - San Diego, CA
Realtor & CDPE, Mission Valley specialist

Hey, Wade - Since I worked as a home inspector for fouy years, I know what a "load center" is. However, your general public might not. I like to use "main panel" and "subpanel" since the general public is familiar with those terms.

Aug 31, 2009 03:02 PM
John Mulkey
TheHousingGuru.com - Waleska, GA
Housing Guru

Wade - Good reminder for consumers, especially in older homes, to check for proper grounds.  Since many homeowners feel confident to change receptacles or switches, unexpected and dangerous problems can arise. 

Aug 31, 2009 03:13 PM
Richard Dolbeare
Inactive - Wailuku, HI
Living the Hawaii Lifestyle

I have an older home without the ground wire.  Are you sure such a home violates code?  I'm not aware of a requirement to retrofit older homes although I do plan on getting that done.

Aug 31, 2009 03:29 PM
Not a real person
San Diego, CA

Hey, Wade - Isn't there another exception whereby one can replace two-prong outlets with three-prong outlets and label the ungrounded three-prong outlets as "No grounding conductor"?

To answer Richard's question, homes without older outlets and wiring are not required to be retrofitted, but why one would not want to is beyond me.

I think your first sentence in your post kind of conflicts with the rest of your post: "Ungrounded outlets are a safety hazard and are in violation of the building and national wiring codes. They need be made safe immediately." If that really were true, then homes would have to be retrofitted.

Happy New Year!

Jan 06, 2010 05:11 PM
Not a real person
San Diego, CA

Just stopped by to let you, and anyone reading this, know that there's an ActiveRain Super Bowl Party going on. Stop by if you have a chance.

Feb 07, 2010 12:05 PM