About 5 yrs ago I had some additional kitchen cabinets installed
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Any Ideas for this corner with the wood stove pipe?
I am unclear as to what to do with this part of my house, "The Breakfast Nook".
Do you know if the electrical outlet was disconnected with the wires being capped off when the new cabinets were installed? or was the outlet simply covered over with drywall?
Are there lower base cabinets in front of aprox where the outlet used to be, or are upper cabinets covering the space?
I'm sure there is some gadjet out there, that can fine the outlet for you. Call Homedepot or Lowe's electricial department, and ask if theirs such a tool. If you can, find it, I would call an electrician to do the job, you don't want to do it yourself. If it's no done right, it could cause a fire.
If you remember where the outlet is located, you can cut an access hole in the back of the cabinet (after taking it down). Then drill a hole through the bottom of the cabinet. Remount the cabinet on the wall. You can then feed the cord for your appliance up through that hole. Alternatively, you can mount an outlet strip on the bottom of the cabinet. If these suggestions won't work for you, you can hire an electrician to feed new wire from the old outlet down to a new one that is more easily accessed.
Hire a professional....You will be glad you did.
never never never cove up any outlet now you know why
You can use a circuit tester to locate the line it will beep and flash when it locates a live line. Then call a pro. Hopes this will help you out
I didn't realize it is behind a base cabinet...
O.K now I am getting a picture of where the former electrical plug is.
It is possible to "move" it up to the wall space between the upper cabinets and the lower cabinets, providing that the length of the electrical wiring is long enough to reach.
Depending on the direction that this plug comes from the main electrical panel, or the nearest junction box, the length of the wiring may or may not be long enough. There is really no way of knowing until you open things up.
If you can remember behind which base cabinet this plug used to be, then the base cabinet can be unanchored, and moved out. This can be done, although due to the weight of the lower cabinet, they are generally quite bulky to try to move forward without yanking everything else out of place.
If the base cabinet can come out forward, then it should be easy to see the plug on the wall.
Shut off the power to this plug, unscrew the plastic covering plate, and pull out the box to see what the length of wire might be. If it is long enough to reach up to the wall space above the lower cabinet, then it can be moved up by cutting a new hole in the drywall remounting the box in place.
To be safe, it should be reconnected by someone who is qualified to ensure that everything is done correctly to code.
Some stud finders detect plumbing and metal wires.
https://www.doityourself.com/stry/what-is-a-live-wire-warning-on-an-electronic-stud-finder
You can buy a non contact circuit tester to locate the hidden outlet as long as there is power going to it. The outlet and box would not be able to be moved to the location you want. A new box and outlet would need to be installed at the new location and wires run from the hidden box to the new box.