We wanted to replace a light fixture in our dining room, and I thought it would be straightforward, but I find myself second-guessing myself.
The fixture comes with four wires and instructions that are essentially nonexistent. I think "N" is neutral, "L" is load and the bare copper wire is ground. And this question said the wire with the horizontal lines and vertical line is also a ground?
And I'll be wiring into this box, which is switched and has a set of wires coming from the right (switch?) and one from the left (to continue the circuit?)
Am I on the right track that the Load wire goes to the black wires and the Neutral wire goes to the white wires.
And the ground wire with the horizontal lines and vertical line, that should go to the bare copper wire, while the fixture's bare copper wire should to the fixture bracket's ground screw and then to the other grounds?
EDIT: The switch works. It also controls four, recessed LED fixtures surrounding the fixture box.
Here's the old fixture. The wire with blue tape went to the black wires in the box. The neutral wire on the old fixture may have been not connected to the white wires in the box. I say may have because as I was taking it down, it wasn't really pigtailed to the others.