Switched grounded conductors

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FWIW, the prohibition on switching neutrals disappeared in the 1928, '30 and '31 NEC. It shows back up in 1933.
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Knob and tube three ways you switch the hot sometimes and the grounded sometimes.

Feed 120v to the travelers, take the point side of each switch to the light.
 
Thanks for the replies. FWIW the wiring is all BX. As I replaced each fixture I rewired each cieling box and switched the UGC.
you are probably aware, but the "old BX" is a somewhat dangerous critter.
A short can cause the metal "wrap" to become a "heater" due to the resistance. Thats why today's BX (AC) has the bond strip.
 
You got that right, Gus. The first time I saw it, there was about a 30' piece just as red as

a toaster wire, man I came out of that attic and ran to the basement and pulled the main.

Never trusted it after that.
 
A short can cause the metal "wrap" to become a "heater" due to the resistance. Thats why today's BX (AC) has the bond strip.
It's actually (in theory, anyway) inductive impedance caused by the spiral wrap, not just DC resistance, which is why the thin bonding strip is effective. It only needs to short each turn to its neighbors.
 
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