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The third cable will be going to the vanity lights. Normally, lights (e.g., the overhead lights connected to the existing switch) don't need GFCI protection. However, vanity lights where (unclear) somehow touching the mirror affects the lights, is a case where I would highly recommend GFCI protection for safety. The GFCI has two sets of screws.
Recycle. Check your local recycling center, some of them will recycle mirrors at no cost. Repurpose. The mirror could be reused by someone else as is if it is good shape. Some advertisement may be necessary in local media, or you can use free advertising as indicated below in the comments by @Steve. Donate.
Caveat emptor! The fix I made was to salvage hinges from a previous glass doored cabinet. You might have to order your own (see below). The bracket on the hinge that attached to the door has a cross section shaped like a "U", or an "L" with a toe on the mirror side (right) and two set screws on the back (left) to pinch into the door board.
They are bare panels. The steel clips are not an option because I have eight mirrors that need to mounted as one big mirror, side-by-side. That doesn't explain why they're not an option. Obviously the clips go on the top and bottom, so the arrangement isn't an issue.
Viewed 3k times. 1. I’m attempting to replace the vanity mirror in my daughter’s bathroom. The old mirror is wired for electric lighting, but the new mirror is just a mirror with no attached lighting fixture. My question is, when I remove the old mirror, do I simply cap off the existing wiring and the hang the new mirror in place of the old ...
Make sure that you have bought vanity and any other fixed pieces (mirrors/medicine cabinets/whatever) for the bathroom at this point. It is important to know the height of new vanity, height of backsplash pieces and other things so that electric/plumbing considerations can be taken.
I have a relatively new house (5 years old) and am thinking of hanging a large mirror over an electrical outlet. I don't have a need for the electrical outlet in that area, so I'm fine from a usage
Bathroom sink with mirror & vanity light. Presently, the vanity light switch and single receptacle are separate from each other and in awkward locations. I intend to put them together in a single box. 1) What are the safe-location rules for placing a receptacle at a bathroom sink? Examples: minimum height from counter or minimum distance from ...
2) Remove the cover from the other side of the vanity, the side that's working, and examine the connections for the wires from other lights to where they hook up to the white and black wires from the switch. Look for burnt or disconnected wires. Redo any connections that look bad.
That means that if I center the light there, I'd want to center the vanity there as well. So I'm trying to determine what to do here, because really then my only choice seems to be a 30ish" vanity, which seems small given the size of the room. if I did a 36" vanity, I wouldn't be able to have it centered enough to the left against the wall.