gar
Senior Member
- Location
- Ann Arbor, Michigan
- Occupation
- EE
190922-2222 EDT
Eddie702:
A suggestion that may help you.
You now know the two breakers that are wired together in a loop. Disconnect one of the hot wires at the main panel from its breaker. Obviously both of these breakers need to be off when you do this. Connect a 1500 W space heater between the removed wire and neutral. Turn all breakers in the panel off, and turn on the one connected breaker to the problem circuit. This will cause about 10 A to flow in this loop.
Where the wires of this loop are not close together there will be a reasonably detectable magnetic field around the wire. With a magnetic field sensor you trace where the wires run in the walls. With a test lead from the output of the closed breaker you can measure the voltage drop along the loop.
I don't think the voltage drop measurement will directly take you to the problem point, but it may help you guess where. Logic may lead you to a likely location.
How can you look for the stray magnetic field? I use an air core coil on about a 1/2" square tube with 1000 to 2000 turns. Properly orientated and about a foot from the 10 A current I will see more than 1 mV.
Then I tried using the 120 V primary of a Nutone transformer without removing the core as the sensor coil. Saw something like 10 mV at 1 foot. A 240 V Nutone would be better, don't know if one is made.
.
Eddie702:
A suggestion that may help you.
You now know the two breakers that are wired together in a loop. Disconnect one of the hot wires at the main panel from its breaker. Obviously both of these breakers need to be off when you do this. Connect a 1500 W space heater between the removed wire and neutral. Turn all breakers in the panel off, and turn on the one connected breaker to the problem circuit. This will cause about 10 A to flow in this loop.
Where the wires of this loop are not close together there will be a reasonably detectable magnetic field around the wire. With a magnetic field sensor you trace where the wires run in the walls. With a test lead from the output of the closed breaker you can measure the voltage drop along the loop.
I don't think the voltage drop measurement will directly take you to the problem point, but it may help you guess where. Logic may lead you to a likely location.
How can you look for the stray magnetic field? I use an air core coil on about a 1/2" square tube with 1000 to 2000 turns. Properly orientated and about a foot from the 10 A current I will see more than 1 mV.
Then I tried using the 120 V primary of a Nutone transformer without removing the core as the sensor coil. Saw something like 10 mV at 1 foot. A 240 V Nutone would be better, don't know if one is made.
.