Re: Question on side job
Originally posted by beachbumjeremy:
I forgot to mentino that I did test the voltage of the lighting circuit with the range on and off. It drops from 118 to 117.
One volt? That's nothing, and plenty of voltage left after the fact.
Due to the voltage drop, I think the problem is there are not enough amps at the service to supply both the lighting loads and the range.
That's way off base. Throw an ampclamp on that, and you'll find less than 50 amps on that service with the range and the lights on, I can virtually guarantee.
1. Do all the lights in the house flicker?
If "yes", are they all on the same circuit?
If "no", proceed to #2.
If you answered "yes" to #1, then you need to plug in a lamp to another circuit and see if you see the same effect.
2. The problem is probably not at the service. Think of the electrical system as a big pyramid, with the service at the top. If the service is bad, everything will be affected.
So you need to determine what circuits are affected, and check the connections as iwire mentioned in the second post.
You only stand to lose face if you jump to conclusions, such as blaming the utility. Do some snooping before you make recommendations such as that to the homeowner. You realize what a scheduling pain it is for the h/o to meet up with the power company? Be sure of the problem before you jump the gun.
And get someone that's good at troubleshooting from your shop involved, that'll probably save you a lot of time. Troubleshooting over the net is a long shot at best in most cases. Nothing beats an experienced set of eyes on the job.
And quit doing sidework all ready, your boss is gonna be ticked.
