Fred B
Senior Member
- Location
- Upstate, NY
- Occupation
- Electrician
Have an old Murray/Arrow Hart subpanel that had a catastrophic failure arcing and burning. Fortunately I was there preparing to move several circuits for carpenters that where moving walls and was able to shut it down from the main panel before it got worse. Mason was in garage using a large wet saw for cutting bricks when I heard the arcing then saw sparks coming out of the panel.
Pre incident l had originally found evidence of heating on multiple circuit breakers as well as 100 amp feed cable and told home owner and GC of issue and after some conjoilling by me was going to be "allowed" to replace panel.
On post failure inspection of panel I found a dryer circuit wired with 10/2 that had the bare conductor landed on the ground bus not the neutral. Also found the dryer breaker had fused to the buss on one phase leg. I also found similar fusing on the 100 Amp main breaker of the same phase in sub panel as was the fused 30A breaker, (set screw welded). Heat damage on the 100A wire all the way back to main panel on that same phase.
Could have landing the gounding conductor wire on the wrong bus caused or contributed to the breaker of the dryer becoming fused to the bus of the A side of Single-Phase? (Cant separate the breaker from the bus.) As well as the previous evidence of multiple breakers showing heat damage?
I was looking for thoughts as to whether inappropriate ground/neutral landing of a 3 wire (ie 10/2) of a 240V circuit would have a direct, or indirect yet causative, effect contributing to the catastrophic failure of the subpanel over time that carried thru to the main panel 100 amp feed breaker? Or would it be a curiosity but unrelated coincidence?
Pre incident l had originally found evidence of heating on multiple circuit breakers as well as 100 amp feed cable and told home owner and GC of issue and after some conjoilling by me was going to be "allowed" to replace panel.
On post failure inspection of panel I found a dryer circuit wired with 10/2 that had the bare conductor landed on the ground bus not the neutral. Also found the dryer breaker had fused to the buss on one phase leg. I also found similar fusing on the 100 Amp main breaker of the same phase in sub panel as was the fused 30A breaker, (set screw welded). Heat damage on the 100A wire all the way back to main panel on that same phase.
Could have landing the gounding conductor wire on the wrong bus caused or contributed to the breaker of the dryer becoming fused to the bus of the A side of Single-Phase? (Cant separate the breaker from the bus.) As well as the previous evidence of multiple breakers showing heat damage?
I was looking for thoughts as to whether inappropriate ground/neutral landing of a 3 wire (ie 10/2) of a 240V circuit would have a direct, or indirect yet causative, effect contributing to the catastrophic failure of the subpanel over time that carried thru to the main panel 100 amp feed breaker? Or would it be a curiosity but unrelated coincidence?