The wire go to the same place as the old ones. The 2 wires with the purple marretts go to you switch.The dummy is me!
I'm replacing an old dimmer switch with a simple, single pole on/off switch.
The box is full of wires. I don't know what's what. I need to connect a white and a black and a ground. Which ones?
The dimmer removed was not three way.Hmm either this switch box is being used more like a junction box (powers other lights/switches), or it's a 3 way wire setup, meaning you might have 2 switches/dimmers at different locations to switch/on/off/or dim this light(s).
Just a guess.
This might help you solve this
or
maybe you can find a diagram to match what you have.
If the feed to the circuit went to the fixture first the neutral connection is made in the fixture box. The white is used for the switched live so a three wire cable isn't required to the switch.Why is white being connected to your single pole switch? Normally you would connect two blacks to switch to interrupt hot as well as ground for safety. White would remain as it is now.
Edit:
My guess without testing anything (always dangerous to make assumptions) is you have hot coming in and hot going out to the next light/receptacle at the bottom and hot going out to light at the top.
Just curious as to why?Avoid the temptation to backstab the switch, wires properly under screws.
Bleeping terrible connection. Tiny contact point with minimal pressure. Lots of heat buildup there. There are some decent backstabs where you put the wire in straight and then tightening the screw closes a clamp but they are far less common than the tiny bent piece of metal.Just curious as to why?
The connections can become loose over time, worse on cheap outlets and switches. Will they for sure, no, but it is actually one of the most common "faults" that cause eventual nuisance arc-fault trips so it shows it is a "problem" in many cases.Just curious as to why?