this post was submitted on 27 Dec 2023
26 points (100.0% liked)
Plumbing
198 readers
1 users here now
A place for Plumbers and those interested in Plumbing to ask questions and discuss the trade.
Community guidelines:
If you have a plumbing question please include a picture in your post.
If you have a question such as "does this look correct?" please include the code your area adheres to. If you're not sure please include state/province/country you're in. Codes can vary state to state and what's wrong in one area may be perfectly acceptable in another.
Just as codes vary, prices do too. That's why we won't discuss any pricing because there's so many factors that can't or shouldn't be conveyed to strangers over the internet.
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
This is more of an electrical problem rather than a plumbing issue. But rust inside the junction box is a sign of water getting into it. You need to find the source of the water that's getting in and stop that too. It looks like there is only a bad connection inside the wire nut. Most likely due to being wet. You can try changing the wire nuts if you feel comfortable with electricity.
Switch the breaker to "off" and lock it out & tag it so nobody turns it on accidently.
Verify power is off to both wires with a meter or voltage indicator.
Cut back the wires until you have a good section of wire to strip and install new wire nuts. (Remove one wire nut at a time so you don't mix wires.)
If you are not comfortable with electricity please do not attempt this repair and contact someone who is.
The rust and/or bad connection will create resistance at the connection, which can cause it to heat up as well. If that's what happened, it could have melted the wire nut slowly till the wire was exposed, and shorted against a metal part. It looks like there is a diagram of the wiring too to the left near that connection too, which may help if you need to disconnect/reconnect it.