One 4-way switch and two 3-way switches
Total of 3 switches controlling same fixture, Power at 3rd Switch, Fixture feed from 3rd Switch
At the ceiling box - the ungrounded conductor {aka hot} from the fixture (could be a brass colored screw) connects to the black wire from the switch 3. The white wire from switch 3 is the grounded leg conductor
{aka neutral} for the fixture (could be a silver color screw).
Wrap a piece of black electrical tape around both ends of all white wire going between switch box 1 and 2, and the white wire going between switch 2 and 3 as these wires are also being used as a ungrounded conductor {aka hot}.
Bare wires are together and grounded to box (if metallic) and if the fixture has a green wire or a grounding screw, it gets grounded also. Bares and green wires are equipment grounding conductors.
Be sure to read any documentation that comes with your fixture
If you need onward power from the fixture
If only switched power required onward then at existing fixture...
- onward cable - black/white/bare
- connect black from onward cable
to the black from switch 3.
- connect white from onward cable to white wire from switch 3.
- connect bare from onward cable to other bares and to electrical box if metallic.
- At the onward cables destination,
the black is the switched ungrounded conductor {aka hot}, the white is the grounded leg {aka neutral}, and the bare is the equipment grounding conductor.
If only unswitched power required onward then at existing fixture...
Onward unswitched power is not possible with this configuration
as no unswitched ungrounded conductor {aka hot} exists at the fixture location.
If you need onward power from the switch
NOTE: Onward power is only possible at the switch 3 location
as no grounded leg {aka neutral} wire exists at switch 1 or 2 locations.
If only switched power required onward then at existing switch 3
- onward cable - black/white/bare
- connect black from onward cable
to the black from switch 2
- connect white from onward cable to white wire from circuit power supply cable.
- connect bare from onward cable to other bares and to electrical box if metallic.
- At the onward cables destination, the black is the switched ungrounded conductor {aka hot}, the white is the grounded leg {aka neutral}, and the bare is the equipment grounding conductor.
If only unswitched power required onward then at existing switch 1
- onward cable - black/white/bare
- connect black from onward cable
to the black from circuit power supply cable
- connect white from onward cable to white wire from circuit power supply cable.
- connect bare from onward cable to other bares and to electrical box if metallic.
- At the onward cables destination, the black is the ungrounded conductor {aka hot}, the white is the grounded leg {aka neutral}, and the bare is the equipment grounding conductor.
If switched & unswitched power required onward then at existing
switch 3
- onward cable - black/red/white/bare
- connect black from onward cable to the black from circuit power supply cable
- connect red from onward cable to the black from switch 2
- connect white from onward cable to white wire from circuit power supply cable.
- connect bare from onward cable to other bares and to electrical box if metallic.
- At the onward cables destination, the black is the unswitched ungrounded conductor {aka hot}, the red is the switched ungrounded conductor {aka hot},
the white is the grounded leg {aka neutral}, and the bare is the equipment grounding conductor.
The common screw on a 3 way switch is the odd color screw
If wiring multiple fixtures be sure to check the following guidelines
concerning how to do it and what not to do: Wiring
Multiple Fixtures.
If you are new at understanding the "politically correct" electrical terminology
and need clarification of the terms used, we strongly urge you to read the Clarification
of Definitions and Terminology guide. This will explain the terminology
used in this article.
Also, be sure to read "Identifying
the Correct Screws on 4-Way and 3-Way Switches".