busman
Senior Member
- Location
- Northern Virginia
- Occupation
- Master Electrician / Electrical Engineer
I was on a call last Saturday (HO tried to replace photocell and sparks flew). Turns out that the reason there were sparks was the he tried to do it HOT because he couldn't find a breaker to shut the light off. The reason was a backfeed. I identified the two conductors in the panel that are crossed downstream and tried for about an hour to find the backfeed without success. It was getting late, so I tied both conductors together and attached to ONE 15A breaker as a temporary until I can get back and find the backfeed.
The question is: This violates two code rules (parallel conductors and all conductors of the same circuit in the same cable), can you see any real hazard in the short run? Since each of the parallel conductors is capable of carrying the entire 15A load, I don't see any hazard there. I would think that the parallel currents would split the same way in the hots and neutrals and not cause inductive heating. I would think the biggest problem would be overloading the circuit (two circuits are sharing 15A). I told the HO this might happen and to call me if the CB trips. I'm going back tomorrow.
Any thoughts? You guys ever do this.
Thanks,
Mark
The question is: This violates two code rules (parallel conductors and all conductors of the same circuit in the same cable), can you see any real hazard in the short run? Since each of the parallel conductors is capable of carrying the entire 15A load, I don't see any hazard there. I would think that the parallel currents would split the same way in the hots and neutrals and not cause inductive heating. I would think the biggest problem would be overloading the circuit (two circuits are sharing 15A). I told the HO this might happen and to call me if the CB trips. I'm going back tomorrow.
Any thoughts? You guys ever do this.
Thanks,
Mark