Hi Karen
When connecting to aluminum wiring you must use a special wire nut rated for aluminum wire. These are availible at any big box store HD or Lowes.
Have you tried wiring the light and using a tester at the socket? I know it sounds simple but have to tried another bulb?
I had the socket wired and touched the two ends to the aluminum and got nothing. We tried tying them on by wrapping it around. We have the special wire nuts, tried it with them the first time and got nothing so we don't want to go through the whole process again until we know the electicity is flowing to the bulb. I checked the bulb - it is good.
Is there a special technique to make a good connection between these 2 different wires?
Hi Karen Sorry I had to step out for a few minutes.
When you tested for voltage, where did you test, and what type of tester did you use?
The room is dark right now but we will try it in the morning. I'll let you know. Thanks Paul.
Karen
Hi Paul,
Sorry it took so long to get back to you but we had to go out of town. We just opened up the pigtail and sanded it and bought new wire and a new socket but still can't get the light bulb to light. (good light bulb). It seems we get a 115 volt reading from the ceiling wires by themselves but as soon as we put a 100 watt load on it we get no reading on the meter. The switch on this is a dimmer. We previously, when all these problems started, had a short circuit - probably a bad wire on the light. Could the dimmer have been damaged from the short circuit so it can't handle the load. Is there an easy way to test the dimmer?
Thanks for your help.
The dimmer is most likely junk. They do not like that short circuit stuff at all.
Seeing you are getting a voltage reading, I am willing to bet the dimmer has a light on it and that is why you get voltage. Replace that dimmer and "you will see the light". :-)
Let me know if you need more help.
Electrician
23 yrs as an electrician, self employed contractor, municipal inspector