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Beartracks

(14,637 posts)
Wed May 13, 2026, 07:46 PM 3 hrs ago

I have a floppy lightswitch! (And no, this is not a personal problem.)

To be clear, it is not the plate that's loose, but the actual standard up-and-down switch. It has lost its "snap." While the light still turns on when I push it up, the switch doesn't stay up completely but settles back down a bit from gravity. Similarly, there's no "snap" when pushing it down to turn the light off.

I have a similar problem on a side-to-side switch that has a trio of "rocker" switches for the fan and heater; the middle switch won't "snap" into position for on or off, and sometimes I almost can't get the fan to turn off without jamming on the switch.

Is this a broken switch thing? Or could it just be loose wires in the back somehow causing this problem? I'm just wanting to know what to perhaps expect before I turn off the power and get in there to (hopefully) fix these things.

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6 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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I have a floppy lightswitch! (And no, this is not a personal problem.) (Original Post) Beartracks 3 hrs ago OP
Not sure buy I'd buy commercial grade replacements. SheltieLover 3 hrs ago #1
Happens all the time. OAITW r.2.0 3 hrs ago #2
I'm a chickenshit. chicoescuela 2 hrs ago #5
The worst scenario regarding replacing the switch would be running into aluminum wiring. John1956PA 2 hrs ago #3
Please replace. Janky switches can arc and cause fires if the contacts are not solidly made. usonian 2 hrs ago #4
1: it's a broken switch, not loose wires, definitely ret5hd 2 hrs ago #6

SheltieLover

(81,602 posts)
1. Not sure buy I'd buy commercial grade replacements.
Wed May 13, 2026, 07:50 PM
3 hrs ago

It only takes a few min to wire in replacements.

OAITW r.2.0

(32,530 posts)
2. Happens all the time.
Wed May 13, 2026, 07:55 PM
3 hrs ago

Easy fix. Shut the circuit breaker off at the panel that controls the light switch. Remove plate....remove switch to box mounting screws. pull out ( should be plenty of wire to remove from box. Remove the wire from switch screws (2-3 )....go to hardware store and get equivalent switch....reverse the procedure described above.

chicoescuela

(3,180 posts)
5. I'm a chickenshit.
Wed May 13, 2026, 08:31 PM
2 hrs ago

I shut down the entire house in case of a potential ‘own goal’ by gramps.

John1956PA

(5,113 posts)
3. The worst scenario regarding replacing the switch would be running into aluminum wiring.
Wed May 13, 2026, 08:25 PM
2 hrs ago

It unlikely that you will run into aluminum wiring, since it was used only briefly in the 1970s. Over 99% of the wiring found in residences and apartments is made of copper.

usonian

(26,519 posts)
4. Please replace. Janky switches can arc and cause fires if the contacts are not solidly made.
Wed May 13, 2026, 08:28 PM
2 hrs ago

Simple test to see that the power is off:

Switch the light/lights on.

Find the breaker that turns them off. ALL OF THEM that are controlled by the switches in that box.

Put a piece of tape over the turned-off breaker. In case of clowns on the loose.

Extra Credit: a neon tester is fine, cheap for testing inside the switch box -- and see link below.

Of course, work by day or with a battery lantern, CUZ THE LIGHTS ARE OUT.

Go replace it per OAITW r.2.0 #2 above

While you are at it, replace all in the same box. They must be the same age and dangerous by now.

Or ask someone who has done it.

https://www.wikihow.com/Replace-a-Light-Switch

Some switches have screw terminals "loop the wire". Some have "push the wire in and screw it tight"

ret5hd

(22,582 posts)
6. 1: it's a broken switch, not loose wires, definitely
Wed May 13, 2026, 08:55 PM
2 hrs ago

2: spring for commercial grade (especially frequently plugged/unplugged outlets) whenever you replace electrical components. Buy once, cry once.

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