Duplex Receptacle + Nightlight

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blargh

Member
Location
Redwood City, CA
Occupation
Design Engineer
I feel like I must be missing something, but does anyone know of a decent duplex receptacle that has a built-in nightlight?

I've used this GFCI model, Pass & Seymour 1595NTLTRWCC4, which has a better light than a lot of standalone nightlights I've seen:
0b6c0e7f-923e-4597-87a9-dae7fcc990b3_300.jpg

That one is great for bathrooms, but it seems like overkill to put a GFCI in the hallway just to get the night light. For some reason all of the other lighted receptacles I've been able to find have only a single receptacle outlet. This probably goes without saying, but of course it needs to be a TR receptacle as well.
 

svh19044

Senior Member
Location
Philly Suburbs
I feel like I must be missing something, but does anyone know of a decent duplex receptacle that has a built-in nightlight?

I've used this GFCI model, Pass & Seymour 1595NTLTRWCC4, which has a better light than a lot of standalone nightlights I've seen:
View attachment 6192

That one is great for bathrooms, but it seems like overkill to put a GFCI in the hallway just to get the night light. For some reason all of the other lighted receptacles I've been able to find have only a single receptacle outlet. This probably goes without saying, but of course it needs to be a TR receptacle as well.

I have yet to see what you are describing.

For the price, why do you feel it is overkill?
 

Dennis Alwon

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Chapel Hill, NC
Occupation
Retired Electrical Contractor
Yes, Pass & Seymour makes them--- [h=1]TradeMaster Decorator Hallway Light & Single Receptacle, White - TM8HWLWCC[/h]
E07D151FCE954D82A7B6A7204FF5D320.ashx
 

Dennis Alwon

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Chapel Hill, NC
Occupation
Retired Electrical Contractor
He is asking about a light which has two receptacles...ala duplex. That one is (obviously) a single outlet with a light taking up the other half.

Yeah but if it is for a hallway you probably don't need two places to plug into. I assumed he meant a duplex device but I didn't read the post well.
 

svh19044

Senior Member
Location
Philly Suburbs
Yeah but if it is for a hallway you probably don't need two places to plug into. I assumed he meant a duplex device but I didn't read the post well.

Your logic doesn't match that of a woman's. One plug is for the things that make homes smell like crap, and the other is for the vacuum.

Or I have also had many customers who want to use the carbon monoxide plug in detectors and still have a receptacle available. I just use the gfci night lights in cases like this, as the price is relatively speaking, cheap.
 
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John120/240

Senior Member
Location
Olathe, Kansas
Your logic doesn't match that of a woman's. One plug is for the things that make homes smell like crap, and the other is for the vacuum.

Or I have also had many customers who want to use the carbon monoxide plug in detectors and still have a receptacle available. I just use the gfci night lights in cases like this, as the price is relatively speaking, cheap.

If the homeowner needs that many openings in the hallway, install a 2 gang box with one

nightlight recptacle, & one duplex recptacle. Three openings, C O detector,vaccum, & air freshner.
 

svh19044

Senior Member
Location
Philly Suburbs
If the homeowner needs that many openings in the hallway, install a 2 gang box with one

nightlight recptacle, & one duplex recptacle. Three openings, C O detector,vaccum, & air freshner.

Too much of an eyesore...But really, you can't plug in anything next to most co detectors so your suggestion with that and the air freshener wouldn't work anyway.

I think what the original poster is asking for is reasonable, and wouldn't be a challenge for a manufacturer like p and s. But until that happens, the gfci is cheap enough to install without hesitation.
 

John120/240

Senior Member
Location
Olathe, Kansas
Too much of an eyesore...But really, you can't plug in anything next to most co detectors so your suggestion with that and the air freshener wouldn't work anyway.

I think what the original poster is asking for is reasonable, and wouldn't be a challenge for a manufacturer like p and s. But until that happens, the gfci is cheap enough to install without hesitation.

So you install a GFCI in the hallway for the glow of the green light ? Seems like a waste to me.

Whatever floats your boat.
 

blargh

Member
Location
Redwood City, CA
Occupation
Design Engineer
In all honesty, a single receptacle with a nightlight would probably be just fine. It's not like it will get heavy usage. And yes, the GFCI is plenty cheap enough to just go for it. As I said in the original post, I just wanted to make sure I wasn't missing something somewhere buried in the back of the parts catalog.
 

marti smith

Senior Member
Your logic doesn't match that of a woman's. One plug is for the things that make homes smell like crap, and the other is for the vacuum.

Or I have also had many customers who want to use the carbon monoxide plug in detectors and still have a receptacle available. I just use the gfci night lights in cases like this, as the price is relatively speaking, cheap.

IF I want my house to smell like crap I simply leave the door open while my hubby is on the jon, otherwise, the night light and single receptacle has been a big hit in some of the homes here that are for the elderly. You meet the receptacle requirement while having an additional light at night.
 

renosteinke

Senior Member
Location
NE Arkansas
It seems to me that P&S did offer a greater selection for their new line of 'modular' devices .... then the "tamper resistant" silliness got started, and disrupted the dickens out of things.

Likewise, Hubbell and Leviton DID once offer 'illuminated' duplex devices .... but those seem to have gone away as well.

Now .... some editorial comments ....

I've used the P&S single recep / night light devices. They're quite well thought out; there is a light sensor in them, so they don't light up during the daytime ... and the light actually dims as light levels increase in the room. They give out just the 'right' amount of light - enough to see, but not so much as to blind you in the middle of the night.

Illuminated receptacles? I love the idea ... how often have you groped for a receptacle behind a couch or headboard? It's also a quick way of telling if there's power to the circuit. Then again, I'm one of those goofy folks who also likes illuminated light switches.
 

kwired

Electron manager
Location
NE Nebraska
Put a dimmer on the overhead light - dim it down for night light and install regular duplex receptacle. That is even easy conversion for existing.
 
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