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Discussion Starter · #1 ·
So my wife and i rent a house and we decided to paint our bedroom the other evening. Well i accidentally rollered right over a power outlet. (ugh) Well the SECOND i did that an entire side of our bedroom lost power. The other half works ok though. I also noticed that a few lights on the opposite side of the wall where the power was lost do not work either. I am very ignorant with power issues. I have checked the breakers, i have turned off EVERY breaker in the house, even the main breaker. No go. I replaced the outlet i painted over with a brand new one. no go. Any ideas? I need my alarm clock for monday! lol. Thanks!! (first post!)

-Ryan
 

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So my wife and i rent a house and we decided to paint our bedroom the other evening. Well i accidentally rollered right over a power outlet. (ugh) Well the SECOND i did that an entire side of our bedroom lost power. The other half works ok though. I also noticed that a few lights on the opposite side of the wall where the power was lost do not work either. I am very ignorant with power issues. I have checked the breakers, i have turned off EVERY breaker in the house, even the main breaker. No go. I replaced the outlet i painted over with a brand new one. no go. Any ideas? I need my alarm clock for monday! lol. Thanks!! (first post!)

-Ryan
Sounds like you shorted out the outlet with the paint. Are you sure you turned the breakers all the way off and back on? Another thing to check, see if you have a GFCI outlet that is tripped. They look like this You push the red button to reset.
 

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If they are renting, I'd bet they weren't supposed to be painting without the landlord's say-so, so it might be a bad plan to bring him in... especially if the fix is resetting GFCI.
 

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I'm more inclined to think that it was a loose back-stab connection in the receptacle than a GFCI tripping. Wouldn't make much sense that only half the room shut off if it was a GFCI.

Shut the circuit breaker off and take the plug out of its box... if the wires are stuffed into a little hole on the back of the receptacle, wiggle and twist them while gently pulling (or just find a little screwdriver and stick it in the release slot) to get them out. Cut the exposed copper off and re-strip the wires. Hopefully you got a new unpainted plug :) I'd recommend wrapping the wires around the screws on the side instead of back-stabbing them.
 

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Discussion Starter · #9 ·
The OP said "I replaced the outlet " Even using the back stab the chances of repeating the problem seems rather slim and the lights on the other side of the wall that don't work may be in a bath room.
To ge this out of the way, our landlord is an old family friend and doesn't really give a rip what we do here as far as decorating, painting or anything of that sort. Of course if we bred mosquitos, fought dogs, or did DNA splicing then she might care. Anyway, Yes i have tried both methods, Backstabbing and the screw. Neither have worked. The bathroom DOES have a GFCI. I will try to make things more clear as well. This is a two level house. The top level is rented by my wife's parents. The bottom level is splt 60/20. We have a single woman who lives in a studio apartment on one side an dmy wife and i live in a one bedroom one bath apartment on the other. The other thing i may point out is that this lower half of this house was built by thus land lady, not a company, so im not sure how she wired it all. To me, the ignorant one, it would SEEM like she daisy chained all the outlets and this one was in the middle so all that followed died after i painted over it. NOTE: This outlet only had ONE black wire ONE white wire and ONE ground wire. The outlet next to it had 2 of each other than the ONE ground wire.
 

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To me, the ignorant one, it would SEEM like she daisy chained all the outlets and this one was in the middle so all that followed died after i painted over it. NOTE: This outlet only had ONE black wire ONE white wire and ONE ground wire. The outlet next to it had 2 of each other than the ONE ground wire.
If it only has one wire then it is impossible that other outlets are daisy chained off this outlet (from this box). Your problem is in one of the other outlets. Turn power off if possible, check each outlet. Check each wire for power before going too far
 

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If there are separate breaker panels and/or meters for each apartment, your circuit might be fed from one of the other panels. If so, you could have tripped a breaker in another panel, or tripped a GFCI in one of the other apartments.

Does anyone else notice a loss of power somewhere?

Although not proper, it is not uncommon to find circuits wired this way (by accident or on purpose).
 

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Discussion Starter · #13 ·
Is there a GFCI receptacle on the circuit, in a bathroom maybe?



That may have tripped and needs a reset.

Edit: hayewe! You beat me with your faster image-finding abilities! :furious::laughing:

Wow. I feel like a total idiot. I was gone on the weekend backpacking so i couldnt respond to your suggestions but i just flipped the GFCI in the bathroom and POW my outlets work. Im so ignorant when it comes to electricity. I am now determined to learn more. Thanks for ALL you help and time. A great community indeed!! :thumbup:
 

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I have the same problem, mine is my bathroom plug that I rolled paint over and its not a GFCI , just a normal plug. I cant plug in my blow dryer or curling iron!! Any ideas?

Uhmmm,...new hair style.

kidding.
Read back thru the 6 year old thread you dredged up and try what the OP did. Somewhere there is a GFCI that tripped either in a different room or in the breaker box
 

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I have the same problem, mine is my bathroom plug that I rolled paint over and its not a GFCI , just a normal plug. I cant plug in my blow dryer or curling iron!! Any ideas?

Check your breaker box first--you might have a GFCI breaker--look for a breaker with a push button and a switch.
 

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Which way would you like it?

Admins promote searching for similar and when they do get reprimanded for doing just that.
Wrong. That mentality is 10-15 years old or more.

Dragging up an ancient thread only confuses things and promotes new answers to the old posts. VERY few people look at the dates of posts before replying.
 
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