All outlets checked out except for the same 6. The only thing I have not done yet is get into the attic to see where the junction is.
I am just riding on the impression that these are gfci'd because it is the room closest to the garage and has outside walls. My previous home had gfci in the living room too (which was interesting).
Going to get a kit to isolate wth is going down, so thank you all for the insight and recs.
Hopping on the shredder now because surely I can't mess that one up.
If the panel box is labeled correctly and most aren't, turn off the appropriate breaker. Sometimes the breaker is tripped internal and not external, which would lead you to believe they're all on.
May not be a gfci the the electrician may have stabbed the wires instead of using the screws on that outlet.
Pull it out and see if one of the wires worked its way out
About half of the electrical problems I check out are this issue
That is what I was thinking. How do you know it's a GFCI if you can't find one tripped?
BTW, I hate stablocks and they ought to be outlawed. The kind that have screw clamps or ok tho.
Willing to bet it’s another issue. Use the volt meter snd see if you have voltage from hot to ground. It’s possible you lost neutral. Also check to see if you have continuity between neutral and ground. If so you can assume you lost hot. Open the switches up that are working and see if a connect came loose there.
I have a light fixture over garage that is not switched. I thought it was and pulled it off..arcing the wires. I could not get power back to it no matter what i tried. All breakers were on. I called an electrician out and they were stumped. After a while and checking every outlet, we narrowed it down to one wire pulled free from an outlet in my finished attic. Completely unrelated other than being on that circuit. The arcing of the fixture wire jolted the system enough to let the one wire pull out of the outlet down stream on the circuit. I've never heard of such a thing but they had seen it before, though it is apparently rare.
Not an electrician by any means... I had an issue sort of like this. It drove me nuts. Wound up being the actual wire going to the receptacle inside of its housing had broken. So the actual copper inside the black or white wire had broken and caused one to trip. I dunno. All looked fine to me like everything was ok. My neighbor had the same issue and helped me track it down. Just a suggestion. I dunno
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