jaylectricity
Senior Member
- Location
- Massachusetts
- Occupation
- licensed journeyman electrician
Hello...the short version:
I have the Klein CL120 and I'm getting bogus readings. I used the plug adapter so I could plug into the receptacle, then plug the equipment into the adapter and get the reading from that. I'm regularly getting readings of 50-100 amps on a 15 or 20 amp circuit. Is there something that causes this? It's frustrating because it's no help at all when diagnosing problems.
More details:
I was getting that kind of reading on a dishwasher. I assumed that maybe my tester was a little beat up and not working properly. So I bought a second one that I don't use much, keep it protected in a box in the cab of my van.
Our power went out during the storm in New England this week. So I have a brand new Generac GP2200i and I run an extension cord into the house where I split it to run to two refrigerators, the gas-fired forced hot air furnace and our entertainment center. I know it's close to the limit. One of the fridges is new and draws maybe 3.1 amps. The other fridge is old and is more like 7 amps. The furnace I was unsure of and the internet and TV are maybe 2 amps. The generator is 1700W (with 2200 available for startups).
So before the splitter I put the brand new plug adapter into the cord coming from the generator. I put the amp clamp on it and watch. Everything starts out normally. I plug one fridge in, it's 3 amps, the other fridge it jumps to about 9. Stays there for a bit as the heater is starting up, but no fan motor yet. Fan motor kicks in and the meter reads 13 amps. Jumps to 15, then back down. All of the sudden I get "OL" for overload. I have it on the 20A range. So I switch it to the 200A range and it reads 50 amps and then eventually 90. It stays like that and I never see it go lower than 88A. Ten minutes go by. I take the clamp off. I turn it off and on. I put the clamp back on...still way up there. I alternate between the grounded conductor and the ungrounded conductor. Still the same.
Let's assume the reading was correct. No way this generator keeps running with that kind of load. And previously when I had it on a 20A circuit for a dishwasher, no way the breaker doesn't trip with 10 minutes of 90A running through it.
Is there something I'm missing? Are these testers just garbage? Anybody else experience this?
End long version
I know it's late, but I just got a chance to sit at the computer. I'll check the thread a little tonight if there are any questions, but most likely I check back in either before work or at lunch.
Thank you.
I have the Klein CL120 and I'm getting bogus readings. I used the plug adapter so I could plug into the receptacle, then plug the equipment into the adapter and get the reading from that. I'm regularly getting readings of 50-100 amps on a 15 or 20 amp circuit. Is there something that causes this? It's frustrating because it's no help at all when diagnosing problems.
More details:
I was getting that kind of reading on a dishwasher. I assumed that maybe my tester was a little beat up and not working properly. So I bought a second one that I don't use much, keep it protected in a box in the cab of my van.
Our power went out during the storm in New England this week. So I have a brand new Generac GP2200i and I run an extension cord into the house where I split it to run to two refrigerators, the gas-fired forced hot air furnace and our entertainment center. I know it's close to the limit. One of the fridges is new and draws maybe 3.1 amps. The other fridge is old and is more like 7 amps. The furnace I was unsure of and the internet and TV are maybe 2 amps. The generator is 1700W (with 2200 available for startups).
So before the splitter I put the brand new plug adapter into the cord coming from the generator. I put the amp clamp on it and watch. Everything starts out normally. I plug one fridge in, it's 3 amps, the other fridge it jumps to about 9. Stays there for a bit as the heater is starting up, but no fan motor yet. Fan motor kicks in and the meter reads 13 amps. Jumps to 15, then back down. All of the sudden I get "OL" for overload. I have it on the 20A range. So I switch it to the 200A range and it reads 50 amps and then eventually 90. It stays like that and I never see it go lower than 88A. Ten minutes go by. I take the clamp off. I turn it off and on. I put the clamp back on...still way up there. I alternate between the grounded conductor and the ungrounded conductor. Still the same.
Let's assume the reading was correct. No way this generator keeps running with that kind of load. And previously when I had it on a 20A circuit for a dishwasher, no way the breaker doesn't trip with 10 minutes of 90A running through it.
Is there something I'm missing? Are these testers just garbage? Anybody else experience this?
End long version
I know it's late, but I just got a chance to sit at the computer. I'll check the thread a little tonight if there are any questions, but most likely I check back in either before work or at lunch.
Thank you.