Bought an older home that has some knob and tube in one circuit. From panel to kitchen, it has all been redone. But some lights upstairs and in attic are knob and tube. I am hiring an electrician to replace all knob and tube.
I wonder if the kitchen wiring can be saved and disconnected from the knob and tube by terminating the line after the last Romex-wired fixture. No idea where in the wall it is sliced to Romex but know where the fixtures attached to knob and tube are. To preserve the kitchen wiring (lots of lights, three way switches, etc), will the following approach help identify where the splice is: open each fixture on Romex and disconnect the outgoing wires one fixture at a time to find the wires that continue to the knob and tube. If the circuit were temporarily terminated at each kitchen fixture (with the line supplying the knob and tube was disconnected), then the power would be cut to the remainder of the knob and tube fixtures, showing that the splice is upstream of the place where the disconnect occurred. Once identified, the knob and tube could be permanently disconnected from a power source.
If this works, then one could keep the kitchen circuit and add new circuits to rewire all the remaining knob and tube fixtures.
I would appreciate any insights.
I wonder if the kitchen wiring can be saved and disconnected from the knob and tube by terminating the line after the last Romex-wired fixture. No idea where in the wall it is sliced to Romex but know where the fixtures attached to knob and tube are. To preserve the kitchen wiring (lots of lights, three way switches, etc), will the following approach help identify where the splice is: open each fixture on Romex and disconnect the outgoing wires one fixture at a time to find the wires that continue to the knob and tube. If the circuit were temporarily terminated at each kitchen fixture (with the line supplying the knob and tube was disconnected), then the power would be cut to the remainder of the knob and tube fixtures, showing that the splice is upstream of the place where the disconnect occurred. Once identified, the knob and tube could be permanently disconnected from a power source.
If this works, then one could keep the kitchen circuit and add new circuits to rewire all the remaining knob and tube fixtures.
I would appreciate any insights.