Charlie Bob
Senior Member
- Location
- West Tennessee
Customer calls. 3 receptacles, light by front door (with 2 three way switches) and little closet light are not working.
After asking all initials questions i find out that:
-Customer plugged a sander in this circuit, while working on floor.
-After a while breaker trips. He resets it. Breaker trips again.
-He resets it again. this time there's no power in the circuit. But breaker is on.
-He changes every receptacle, both switches and still nothing
-He replaces the breaker.still nothing.
Here's my troubleshooting:
-I inspect the panelbox. Everything is ok.Tight and every thing is on.
-I inspect receptacles, swithes and lights. Everything ok.
-I go to the attic looking for a juntion box or splices. None as far as i could tell.
-Since the problem was a certain overload, didn't think a GFCI recep. was the cause, but looked for one anyhow, nothing.
At this moment it got late and frustration set in.
I told customer i'd be back tomorrow.
The attic is a mess, with insulation and paper on top of it all over. Panel box is a mess too.wires every where.
Customer don't even remember which breaker is this circuit OCP.
All breakers are on though. None of them identified.
Evetime i dealt with something like it it wound up being either a GFCI recep. upstream or a fried splice in a junction box.
What do you all think?
Did i miss anything else?
Have you all run into something like it before?
Could the overload and excessive heat damage the wire inside its insulation cutting off its continuity? wild guess!
Thanks.
After asking all initials questions i find out that:
-Customer plugged a sander in this circuit, while working on floor.
-After a while breaker trips. He resets it. Breaker trips again.
-He resets it again. this time there's no power in the circuit. But breaker is on.
-He changes every receptacle, both switches and still nothing
-He replaces the breaker.still nothing.
Here's my troubleshooting:
-I inspect the panelbox. Everything is ok.Tight and every thing is on.
-I inspect receptacles, swithes and lights. Everything ok.
-I go to the attic looking for a juntion box or splices. None as far as i could tell.
-Since the problem was a certain overload, didn't think a GFCI recep. was the cause, but looked for one anyhow, nothing.
At this moment it got late and frustration set in.
I told customer i'd be back tomorrow.
The attic is a mess, with insulation and paper on top of it all over. Panel box is a mess too.wires every where.
Customer don't even remember which breaker is this circuit OCP.
All breakers are on though. None of them identified.
Evetime i dealt with something like it it wound up being either a GFCI recep. upstream or a fried splice in a junction box.
What do you all think?
Did i miss anything else?
Have you all run into something like it before?
Could the overload and excessive heat damage the wire inside its insulation cutting off its continuity? wild guess!
Thanks.