Consider any recent work done (siding, paneling, plumbing, landscaping, etc.) as someone may have driven a nail into the wire or cut into it.
Which puts more resistance in the circuit and lowers amount of current flow.
Did you check for a back feed on that breaker
Did you check for a back feed on that breaker
Could, would you, exlain what you are asking a bit? At times, most my wife would say, I am slow.
I think what he is asking, did the OP check for voltage from another breaker tied to it on an opposite leg. But I think he would have gotten bit while changing the breaker if that was the case.
I did not catch the post where he replaced the breaker, sorry but what I meant was what hillbilly described in his post ,a opposite phase could have been backfeeding this breaker.
That is what you typed, but what you really want to say is, "Come over here and let me give you a hug, it will be OK."Yes, many of us have run into this before.
It is a called a short circuit or ground fault.
That is what you typed, but what you really want to say is, "Come over here and let me give you a hug, it will be OK."
Did I miss what the heating watts was for an 85a load on 120v? If the is an issue I would be very concerned with what is happening at the point of failure. The wattage should be very humbling to be very concerned about such as letting the smoke out resulting in a fire at some unknown location. Doing so would assure that you would be able to find the source in a very short time.
I don't think you missed anything, but 85A @ 120V should give you around 10.2kW. Most of it being given up at the point of failure.
In this particular case, I think that all that prevented a more visible problem (e.g. fire!) was that the resistance in the circuit was distributed over the entire length of all of the branch circuit wiring up to the fault and so the heat was not concentrated in any one place.
But 83 amps does indicate that the voltage drop in the wiring at normal current levels is probably far higher than allowed.
Thanks for the reality check!What is allowed? 3 - 5% in the informational note in the NEC is just a suggestion not a requirement.
Thanks for the reality check!
If the limiting factor is in the wiring resistance, it would imply a voltage drop in the neighborhood of 25 volts for a full amperage load. But if it is a transformer which is limiting it, what does that say about the service itself? What is expected of the feed to the panel?
The OP stated that it is a house with a 200A service.