dhalleron
Senior Member
- Location
- Louisville, KY
- Occupation
- Master Electrician/Senior Fire Alarm Technician
I only do this part time even though I am licensed and insured. I don't even like service calls, I'd rather do a small new install now and then.
Customer told me the breaker stays on for a little while, then trips. She even replaced the breaker before calling me.
I wasn't thinking of a dead short from her description, so I put my amprobe on it and saw 35 amps flowing out the 15 amp breaker when I turned it on. Also heard the hum somewhere throughout the house so I turned off the breaker and put my other meter on it and saw about 3 ohms to ground. Didn't check the exact voltage of the circuit but ohms law told me it was in the right ball park, if not a little low.
So I already used 2 meters in my troubleshooting. I traced the circuit across the basement where I broke open a junction box with old brittle wire. 1 cable going up the wall had the short to ground or neutral on it. It appears to go to the 2nd floor landing where a 3 way switch is.
After breaking that junction, I was able to get the breaker to hold and the basement lights came on. Now all that doesn't work is most of the 2nd floor overhead lights and a couple receptacles. Just a matter of breaking more joints that are soldered and taped in old brittle wiring with wires too short to really pull out of switch boxes. Maybe more room in the ceiling boxes to see what is going on.
I ran out of time to finish after working on it for about 2 hours and needed to pull off and go back later.
The actual owner who this woman is buying the house from on a lease option asked me if I had a meter like they use to trace cable tv and network wiring shorts. They tell the distance down the line where the short is. I said no and I tried to explain to him the meter might tell me the short is 25 feet away, but which direction and in what box does the wiring hit first before it goes to all the other lights. Not much help in an old house where wiring is spliced and goes several directions.
I use the divide and conquer method. That's how I got the basement working. Now time to divide and conquer the second floor. Guess they are afraid my bill is going to be too high.
PS. I just remembered. I unplugged everything upstairs. I didn't take out all of the CFL lights. I wonder if one of them can cause a short like that? I was looking for a bare brittle wire touching somewhere.
Am I going about it the right way? Guess I don't know any other way.
Customer told me the breaker stays on for a little while, then trips. She even replaced the breaker before calling me.
I wasn't thinking of a dead short from her description, so I put my amprobe on it and saw 35 amps flowing out the 15 amp breaker when I turned it on. Also heard the hum somewhere throughout the house so I turned off the breaker and put my other meter on it and saw about 3 ohms to ground. Didn't check the exact voltage of the circuit but ohms law told me it was in the right ball park, if not a little low.
So I already used 2 meters in my troubleshooting. I traced the circuit across the basement where I broke open a junction box with old brittle wire. 1 cable going up the wall had the short to ground or neutral on it. It appears to go to the 2nd floor landing where a 3 way switch is.
After breaking that junction, I was able to get the breaker to hold and the basement lights came on. Now all that doesn't work is most of the 2nd floor overhead lights and a couple receptacles. Just a matter of breaking more joints that are soldered and taped in old brittle wiring with wires too short to really pull out of switch boxes. Maybe more room in the ceiling boxes to see what is going on.
I ran out of time to finish after working on it for about 2 hours and needed to pull off and go back later.
The actual owner who this woman is buying the house from on a lease option asked me if I had a meter like they use to trace cable tv and network wiring shorts. They tell the distance down the line where the short is. I said no and I tried to explain to him the meter might tell me the short is 25 feet away, but which direction and in what box does the wiring hit first before it goes to all the other lights. Not much help in an old house where wiring is spliced and goes several directions.
I use the divide and conquer method. That's how I got the basement working. Now time to divide and conquer the second floor. Guess they are afraid my bill is going to be too high.
PS. I just remembered. I unplugged everything upstairs. I didn't take out all of the CFL lights. I wonder if one of them can cause a short like that? I was looking for a bare brittle wire touching somewhere.
Am I going about it the right way? Guess I don't know any other way.
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