- Location
- Windsor, CO NEC: 2023
- Occupation
- Hospital Master Electrician
I had a warranty call this afternoon. "Cooktop only has 120V, according to the appliance guy, it needs 240V." This cooktop is mounted in an island, with a 120V downdraft exaust fan integral to the cooktop.
It wasn't my house, I inherited the project when things got slow. I had stopped in previously for a three-second slap-a-blank-on-that warranty call before, so I knew where it was.
Anyway, upon close scrutiny, with my handy-dandy Vol-Con tester I just bought, I discovered that the 'black' phase was open between the junction box at the cooktop, and the panel. Fearing the worst, I went back and forth to the panel to be sure. I started to sweat even more, at the prospect of having to blast out her basement ceiling to put in a new run.
Nagging at the back of my mind was the fact that I knew what some would say: Use that ground before you dare start knocking holes in the ceiling.
As I triple-checked my findings, I pored over my memory of conversations I'd had with people in the past, about what the possible problems could be. This house has a finished basement, which is unusual for a new home we wire. As I remembered back, I recalled someone griping about somebody else accidentally giving the branch circuit for the cooktop to the wall oven, and vice versa. I rememberred something about chopping holes in a finished basement to fix it.
Based on this shady recollection, I decided that there was probably a junction box behind the microwave or the oven, that I was not about to try to find without making some phone calls.
I apologized to the homeowner for the inconvenience, and told her that hopefully, there was a junction box at the break; otherwise, I'd be chopping drywall in her new home to install a new home run.
I decided that if it came down to it, I'd put my foot down and refuse to use the ground if pushed. Let someone else fix it, at that rate.
Now, I'd like to have a discussion about why the practice is bad.
I know it's against code six different ways, but physically, why is it bad? I'd like to get some discussion going, before it happens. (It may never happen, I just like being prepared.)
Thanks,
It wasn't my house, I inherited the project when things got slow. I had stopped in previously for a three-second slap-a-blank-on-that warranty call before, so I knew where it was.
Anyway, upon close scrutiny, with my handy-dandy Vol-Con tester I just bought, I discovered that the 'black' phase was open between the junction box at the cooktop, and the panel. Fearing the worst, I went back and forth to the panel to be sure. I started to sweat even more, at the prospect of having to blast out her basement ceiling to put in a new run.
Nagging at the back of my mind was the fact that I knew what some would say: Use that ground before you dare start knocking holes in the ceiling.
As I triple-checked my findings, I pored over my memory of conversations I'd had with people in the past, about what the possible problems could be. This house has a finished basement, which is unusual for a new home we wire. As I remembered back, I recalled someone griping about somebody else accidentally giving the branch circuit for the cooktop to the wall oven, and vice versa. I rememberred something about chopping holes in a finished basement to fix it.
Based on this shady recollection, I decided that there was probably a junction box behind the microwave or the oven, that I was not about to try to find without making some phone calls.
I apologized to the homeowner for the inconvenience, and told her that hopefully, there was a junction box at the break; otherwise, I'd be chopping drywall in her new home to install a new home run.
I decided that if it came down to it, I'd put my foot down and refuse to use the ground if pushed. Let someone else fix it, at that rate.
Now, I'd like to have a discussion about why the practice is bad.
I know it's against code six different ways, but physically, why is it bad? I'd like to get some discussion going, before it happens. (It may never happen, I just like being prepared.)
Thanks,