The wire I have has two wires + a ground. So you are saying I need 3 wires, plus a ground? Like in 14-3 Romex for a 3-way switch?
Sometimes, IMHO, folks that know thus stuff inside-and-out can communicate with others that also know it inside-and-out, but not with
Newbies.
Newbies, IMO, need a little more 'background' information to avoid becoming confused.
No. You do not need 14-3 Romex. But you need THREE 'FUNCTIONS' (for lack of a better term at the moment):
- HOT: Usually black
- NEUTRAL: Usually white
- GROUND: Usually green
Sometimes, existing wall switches have THREE wires (black, white, green), but the black is the HOT from the fixture box in the ceiling and the white is the SWITCHED HOT returning to the fixture box in the ceiling, leaving you with no NEUTRAL for the X10 switches that need it. (The green is still GROUND.)
You need to test / trace the wires you have to see what 'FUNCTIONS' you have:
- Black-to-Green: 120VAC -> HOT & GROUND
- Black-to-White: 120VAC -> HOT & NEUTRAL
- Black-to-White: 0VAC -> HOT & NOTHING
Home Depot, Lowes, Electrical Supply stores sell an Outlet Tester that makes this relationship clearer. It has THREE Neon lamps and the combination of results is explained in a table printed right on the Tester. Won't work with bare wires in a wall switch, but helps to solidify the theory in your brain.
Does that help?
Update: I just found my Outlet Tester, so I thought I'd 'try' to enter a table of the tested conditions to give you an idea:
|.... Lamp 1 .... | |.... Lamp 2 .... | |.... Lamp 3 .... | |.... Meaning ....| |
X | X | O | HOT/NEU REV |
O | O | O | OPEN HOT |
O | O | X | OPEN NEU |
X | O | X | HOT/GRD REV |
O | X | O | OPEN GRD |
O | X | X | OK |