I don't know where you get the idea that insurance companies won't insure houses with old wiring. I bought my house less than 2 years ago. Built in 1951 and wired with old cloth 2-wire. It's insured with Cincinnati Insurance.In my opinion ... Don't walk but run away from old wiring. It is unsafe, and the insurance companies will not insure.
That's quite an opinion, based on what? It could be said that newer wiring is safer, but we've had electrical wires in buildings that have been in service since the 1920's and nobody's walking into them and not walking out.In my opinion ... Don't walk but run away from old wiring. It is unsafe, and the insurance companies will not insure in California.
I don't know where you get the idea that insurance companies won't insure houses with old wiring. I bought my house less than 2 years ago. Built in 1951 and wired with old cloth 2-wire. It's insured with Cincinnati Insurance.
Further, it's not necessarily unsafe. The thing I've seen over and over which seems to have taken the biggest tole on wiring was people using incandescent light bulbs with wattages higher than the fixtures were rated for, and without insulation on the back of the fixture. But I've seen that over and over again in houses from tge 30s all the way to tge 2000s
I don't know where you get the idea that insurance companies won't insure houses with old wiring. I bought my house less than 2 years ago. Built in 1951 and wired with old cloth 2-wire. It's insured with Cincinnati Insurance.
Further, it's not necessarily unsafe. The thing I've seen over and over which seems to have taken the biggest tole on wiring was people using incandescent light bulbs with wattages higher than the fixtures were rated for, and without insulation on the back of the fixture. But I've seen that over and over again in houses from tge 30s all the way to tge 2000s
Agreed. I have no trouble trusting unmolested, non-overloaded knob-and-tube wiring.I've seen intact 100 year old circuits that I'd have no problem keeping in service. The biggest problem I see with old wiring is somebody did hackwork to it
In such cases, I recommend leaving the existing wiring as is, and running a new circuit for the new load(s), such as an A/V or computer system, appliance, etc.In my consulting work, I see it all the time. A homeowner wants to upgrade their two-wire cloth covered Romex. Seems like a simple fix.
I don't know of any issues with insulating over old snake skin wire.Hi
I know you can't insulate over knob and tube wiring but how about old 2 wire romex without a ground probably from the 50s
thanks in advance rob
That's what I'm doing in my own home. Much simpler, and old wiring didn't get disturbed.In such cases, I recommend leaving the existing wiring as is, and running a new circuit for the new load(s), such as an A/V or computer system, appliance, etc.
That way, the existing wiring isn't subject to the additional loading, the new loads receive a direct, well-grounded supply, and the labor savings is substantial.
In my opinion you need to stop giving opinions and providing 100% false info.In my opinion ... These older homes are an electrical hazard. The insurance companies need to implement a program to provide the homeowners a rental while the up-grades to the electrical wiring is performed.
In my opinion you need to stop giving opinions and providing 100% false info.
Insurance companies frequently have issues with screw in fuse protection. Sometimes they want an electrician to evaluate Zinsco or FPE equipment. I have never had a customer state they can't get insurance because they have older NM cable.
Older NM cable only has 60C conductors which is normally only a problem with over-lamped incandescent fixtures. Older NM cable is built much more robust than the current NM-B cable.