All voltages should be measured with respect to the neutral.I only measured across switch contacts and not hot-to-neutral. Will do additional test and measurements later.
I respectfully disagree. If there is a high resistance connection anywhere before or after the switch, the meter, will read the line voltage. The reason being, even a marginal connection, carrying very small currents, will not have a significant voltage drop.If you can't get to the neutral in the switch that controls the bad outlet then plug an incandescent lamp into the "bad" outlet and measure across the switch again. Should have 120 volts with the switch OFF. This will indicate the neutral is OK from the outlet.
SG
That is correct. What's weird is the TS measured 42 volts across the switch when open. Was curious what it would read with a lamp plugged in.I respectfully disagree.
Are the neutrals still connected in the disconnected fluroescent lights?Update. Changed the crappy switch that went to 2 disconnected fluorescent lights in the bathroom. No change anywhere.
That would imply that the outlet is feeding the switch.Changed the "bad" outlet that was tied to the switch above it (and changed the switch too). That outlet had two circuits feeding it. But the center tab separating 2 hot screws was still intact.
That is how most series/chained outlets are done. when the tab is removed the next outlet in the line and all past that one stop working. Only one of your, " That outlet had two circuits feeding it" was a feed to the outlet, the other was going to the next outlet. If you don't do it this way you end up with too many wire nut connections in the circuits.Changed the "bad" outlet that was tied to the switch above it (and changed the switch too). That outlet had two circuits feeding it. But the center tab separating 2 hot screws was still intact. Removed the tab. Nothing changed... voltages are slightly different but still in about the same range.