wirenut1980
Senior Member
- Location
- Plainfield, IN
Hello all!  I am working with a church troubleshooting some failed power supplies in audio mixer boards.  Symptoms include the mixer board shutting down unexpectedly and eventually failing the power supply over time (weeks/months).  The church has started using a borrowed voltage regulator (the type you can plug 120 V loads into) with auto tap changing.  Since they have done this, there have been no problems.  I opened up the subpanel with the branch circuit going to the mixer.  It is a dedicated 20 amp 120 V circuit, and may have a shared neutral, I could not tell in the rats nest of wires on the last visit.  I set a monitor at the outlet to record incoming voltage a couple days ago.  The only thing that seemed strange to me was that the branch circuit was run with #12 AWG MTW stranded copper wire.  Is this a code approved wiring method?  If it is code approved, is it an acceptable wiring method from a design persepective?  The distance is only about 150 feet from the panel to the outlet, but I'm not sure how long the run really is.
With load being constant, I measured 117 V at the outlet and 121 V at the subpanel, neutral-ground voltage was 1.4 V measured at the outlet. Current measured on the circuit labeled A/V equipment outlet only measured 1.4 Amps and visually resembled that of a switch mode power supply. I wonder if the standard 20 amp branch circuit breaker is not rated to receive this MTW wire?
I'll be back there in about a week to download the monitor at the outlet. Thanks in advance for your thoughts!
	
		
			
		
		
	
				
			With load being constant, I measured 117 V at the outlet and 121 V at the subpanel, neutral-ground voltage was 1.4 V measured at the outlet. Current measured on the circuit labeled A/V equipment outlet only measured 1.4 Amps and visually resembled that of a switch mode power supply. I wonder if the standard 20 amp branch circuit breaker is not rated to receive this MTW wire?
I'll be back there in about a week to download the monitor at the outlet. Thanks in advance for your thoughts!
 
				
 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		