Electrical Question

Turn the breaker off and re-check your connections. Sounds to me like you might have a bad connection. Enough to read 120 on your meter and **** up your troubleshooting lol
 
Your meter is throwing you off, definitely no power there, some meters are so sensitive they'll pick up erroneous voltage.

Any chance this outlet is controlled by a light switch?
Are you sure, there was there power there before the construction?

If so, is it possible you cut into the line?
Or - if there is an outlet directly on the other side of the wall, inside, it may be drawing power from there. The connection may have loosened during you work.
 
If nobody has mentioned this, from another receptacle run a temporary neutral to problem receptacle, if that works, it will confirm lost neutral.
 
Use a wiggy type tester on the wires ,not the receptacle if you. Have 120volts install a new. Outlet plug in a light that you verified that it works in another part of your house . If it doesn’t work in the new outlet you have a loose neutral or corroded connection in another box in the same circuit. 5o years of electrical trouble shooting her.
 
PROBLEM SOLVED! 😎

First off thanks everyone for the advice, I would still be lost!

This was an outside breaker, and on the outside breaker marked in my box. So I purchased an outlet tester as suggested. Plug the thing into the outlet and says it’s hooked up as should be. So I took a corded drill and plugged it in. Soon as I went to activate it, the light on the tester switched. It then would show HOT/GRD Rev. After a little research I came up with the conclusion it had to be a loose neutral wire as everyone was thinking. So I take every outlet out on that breaker out again and I can’t for the life of me find a loose wire. I was assuming there had to be a place the outlet jumped over from and only one outlet had a double wire leading to another one. So there had to be a junction box someplace, as also suggested. Also while testing that outlet with the tester I hit the GFCI button and after that none of the outlets worked. The breaker wasn’t tripped and none of the outlets are GFCI outlets so I am like wtf. Deciding it was time for lunch I went to the laundry room in the basement to grab some deer sausage out of the upright freezer and no light comes on. So I look at the outlet and the GFCI outlet is tripped. Then it dawned on me that must be connected to the outside outlets. So I take that outlet out and when I am pulling it out the first thing I notice is a loose neutral wire. Reconnected it and everything worked perfectly after that.
 
PROBLEM SOLVED! 😎

First off thanks everyone for the advice, I would still be lost!

This was an outside breaker, and on the outside breaker marked in my box. So I purchased an outlet tester as suggested. Plug the thing into the outlet and says it’s hooked up as should be. So I took a corded drill and plugged it in. Soon as I went to activate it, the light on the tester switched. It then would show HOT/GRD Rev. After a little research I came up with the conclusion it had to be a loose neutral wire as everyone was thinking. So I take every outlet out on that breaker out again and I can’t for the life of me find a loose wire. I was assuming there had to be a place the outlet jumped over from and only one outlet had a double wire leading to another one. So there had to be a junction box someplace, as also suggested. Also while testing that outlet with the tester I hit the GFCI button and after that none of the outlets worked. The breaker wasn’t tripped and none of the outlets are GFCI outlets so I am like wtf. Deciding it was time for lunch I went to the laundry room in the basement to grab some deer sausage out of the upright freezer and no light comes on. So I look at the outlet and the GFCI outlet is tripped. Then it dawned on me that must be connected to the outside outlets. So I take that outlet out and when I am pulling it out the first thing I notice is a loose neutral wire. Reconnected it and everything worked perfectly after that.
Outstanding. the ROK boys come through again. Have a beer or two with the venison sausage.
 
And now you know your freezer is plugged into a dangerous outlet. If something outside pops that gfci you may lose your freezer.
O was just going to say the same thing. Swap that thing out if you want to keep that meat good. It will fail!!

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Good to hear you got it fixed. Get that freezer on its own non GFCI circuit. 20 amp
 
My entire house is finished. Garage and laundry room included. Be dang near impossible to run a new wire. But I could swap the GFCI outlet out.
 
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