A few months ago I wrote a blog post about homeowner maintenance inspections, wherein I promoted the virtues of having a home inspector conduct maintenance inspections on existing homes every five years or so. I promised to follow up with a post on how homeowners could conduct their own home inspections, but I don't know what I was thinking when I said I'd follow up with a "post". I should have said I'd follow up with my longest "series" of posts ever. For the first part of this series, I covered the inspection of the exterior. I took a little break in this series because I had a few other things to discuss that were somewhat time sensitive, but I'm back on the homeowner inspection series again.
Today I'm going to cover electrical. There is a ridiculous amount of stuff that could be covered with this topic, and a lot of it takes a lot of explaining. I'm going to cover the stuff that takes the least amount of explaining and makes the biggest impact on safety.
Overhead Wires
If your home has overhead wires bringing in power, check to make sure there are no tree branches rubbing on the wires. It's the homeowner's responsibility to maintain / trim trees on the property that may interfere with the overhead wires coming from the utility pole to the house.

Also, take a close look at the connection point between the overhead wires right before they disappear into the mast head. One wire is the neutral wire; it's normal for this wire to be exposed, but the other two wires shouldn't have any exposed contacts. If there are, these are serious shock / electrocution hazards that should be repaired by the utility company. The photo below gives an example of an exposed ferrule at one of the hot wires. Touch that thing with an aluminum ladder, roof rake, or something similar, and it'll be lights out for you.

For more examples of exposed conductors at this location, and for a more in-depth discussion of these issues, click here: Tree Branches, Exposed Power Lines: Who Fixes What
Outlets

To test the outlets at your home, go buy yourself an outlet tester. These are sold at all home improvement stores and hardware stores for about $5, or a little more if the tester comes with a GFCI tester. A GFCI tester makes it a lot easier to verify that non-GFCI outlets in your home are GFCI protected, but it's not a valid way to test GFCI outlets. More on that topic below. The tester shown at right currently sells for $7.49 on Amazon. So now that you have a tester, go around and test all of the outlets in your home. The light codes displayed by the tester will tell you if the outlet is properly wired, or what the problem is if the outlet isn't properly wired.
Here are the potential readings that an outlet tester will give you:
- Open Ground - more commonly described as an ungrounded three-prong outlet. Click this link for information about how to correct an ungrounded three-prong outlet. This is a condition that should be repaired by an electrician.
- Open Neutral - this is a very uncommon defect; it means there is power at the outlet, but whatever is plugged into the outlet won't work. Every once in a while, this is the result of a switched neutral wire.
- Open Hot - there's no "hot" wire at the outlet... or there's a live hot and no neutral and no ground. Whatever is plugged into the outlet won't work. Sometimes this might be the result of a switched outlet and the switch is just off, but in many cases it just means it's a dead outlet.
- Hot/GRD Rev - this is an extremely scary condition that I don't think I've ever actually come across. Plugging in a tool with a three-prong cord would instantly energize the housing of the tool, making it an electrocution hazard. If you find this condition at a GFCI outlet, hit the "test" and then the "reset" button on the outlet and test it again. GFCI outlets will occasionally give funny readings that are not correct.
- Hot/Neu Rev - more commonly described as reversed polarity. Click this link for information about reversed polarity. This is a shock hazard that should be repaired by an electrician.
Every once in a while you'll get a different reading, such as all three lights lit up, or a bright middle light and dim lights on the left and right. These readings indicate problems that should be looked into further by an electrician.