I’ve recently become the owner of a home that was constructed in the mid 1950s (in the US). As such, not all the outlets are grounded, three-prong receptacles, since that wasn’t code-required at the time. It looks like a few have been added or upgraded over the years, but there are still many that are ungrounded. What is the best way to go about converting those receptacles to be grounded? Will that require a professional? It seems like probably the kind of electrical work that I am capable of doing myself, but I am also very much not an electrician.

  • mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    26 days ago

    Until someone does a repair using a non-conductive replacement part. If your ground is running through your sink, and your sink springs a leak, there’s a non-zero chance that the new install will be PEX instead of copper. Still up to code from a plumbing standpoint, but now people in the upstairs shower are getting shocked because the upstairs outlets are tied into ungrounded plumbing.