I never said that!All the above notwithstanding, I would beg/buy/borrow an old analog steam-powered voltmeter and verify that 50 V. reading....I agree with Bruce re: some "inconsequential voltage" but don't think that Bruce would tag 50 V as that....
Sounds to me like the neutral may have been damaged/broken.
Not really. I think what you are thinking of is when you have passive components such as caps, inductors and resistors in both series and in parallel and have to figure out impedance of the lump circuit.Now that I think about it, is this not a parallel series circuit???
I never said that!
50V is not inconsequential if its really there. Hard to imagine getting that from a capacitve effect.
To the OP, where are you measuring the hot lead? After the switches but before the load?
Had the builder and original electrical contractor out today to check out the line. They verified the voltage. But as soon as a load was connected the voltage zeroed. So it seems there is voltage but no current. We crossed both the hot and neutral and hot and ground and nothing happened. No circuit trip, not even a spark. The electrical contractor went so far as to grab the bare lines, again nothing. So with their blessings I remounted and wired the fixture. still doesn't seem quite right to me.
The lines read the voltage with the fixture disconnected.Depending on the age of the fixture there might me a capacitor in the fixture....that could give a residual voltage reading.
I believe the 50 volts to be a phantom voltage which is common when using a digital meter. The meter has a very high impedance and will pick up a voltage reading from capacitive coupling. There is really no voltage there.
Connect any incandescent light across the two wires and try it. You will probably measure zero volts.
I never said that!
50V is not inconsequential if its really there. Hard to imagine getting that from a capacitve effect.
To the OP, where are you measuring the hot lead? After the switches but before the load?
Take an average digital multimeter. Put it on a low voltage range. Connect one lead to the nearest ground, like the center screw on an outlet cover. Pinch the other lead in between your fingers.
What you are reading is capacitive coupling to your body from the house wiring.
50 feet of conductor running within a fraction of an inch of an energized conductor, and with no load on it will have a lot of voltage on it, but will supply extremely low current.
hope it helps
John