I was asked by a fire suppression company I normally do work for to swap out the control head wiring for a system they recently worked on. Just the control head was replaced. It was a pyrochem, your normal restaurant chemical system. It has a normal SPDT microswitch.
I found the original set up to be Normally open, with 120 Volts on it. No fire alarm interface (this place is old). The J box was labeled which panel the unit was fed from. Found it, confirmed it was the correct circuit.
Now from my previous experience with these systems, there is normally two SPDT switches in each control head. One for the fire alarm, one to shut off the "make up air" fan (wrong term?) and sometimes the hood lights. I am referring to the fan that pulls air into the hood. You want the exhaust fan to keep running (or so I am told from the hood guys here in MA.)
Normally, the fan will come back on after you release the microswitch or there is a reset switch for a shunt type device, somewhere near the kitchen door.
Last thing to do is test the switch manually. OK, I do. The kitchen gets quite. Too quiet, I think to myself, but I let go of the switch, and nothing. check for voltage at the hood control head, nothing...Check the breaker, not tripped. The Panel is a MLO, so I don't see what happened. I open up the panel and find there is no power on the breaker. Then, NO power in the whole thing, or the panel next to it. Both fed from the same feeders.
I end up finding a 225 Amp Shunt Switch in the main electrical closet. The hood system trips the shunt. The shunt kills EVERYTHING in the kitchen except the lights. It even kills the power for a Walk in refer/freezer built into the kitchen area. Its been this way for more than 20 years. No one at the place new about this, until now.
I found this to be a bit much, anyone else?
I found the original set up to be Normally open, with 120 Volts on it. No fire alarm interface (this place is old). The J box was labeled which panel the unit was fed from. Found it, confirmed it was the correct circuit.
Now from my previous experience with these systems, there is normally two SPDT switches in each control head. One for the fire alarm, one to shut off the "make up air" fan (wrong term?) and sometimes the hood lights. I am referring to the fan that pulls air into the hood. You want the exhaust fan to keep running (or so I am told from the hood guys here in MA.)
Normally, the fan will come back on after you release the microswitch or there is a reset switch for a shunt type device, somewhere near the kitchen door.
Last thing to do is test the switch manually. OK, I do. The kitchen gets quite. Too quiet, I think to myself, but I let go of the switch, and nothing. check for voltage at the hood control head, nothing...Check the breaker, not tripped. The Panel is a MLO, so I don't see what happened. I open up the panel and find there is no power on the breaker. Then, NO power in the whole thing, or the panel next to it. Both fed from the same feeders.
I end up finding a 225 Amp Shunt Switch in the main electrical closet. The hood system trips the shunt. The shunt kills EVERYTHING in the kitchen except the lights. It even kills the power for a Walk in refer/freezer built into the kitchen area. Its been this way for more than 20 years. No one at the place new about this, until now.
I found this to be a bit much, anyone else?