Removing 1/2 of MWBC (one phase)

If this is K&T and you are updating it at receptacles to provide a ground, why aren't you doing a home run back to the panel? If not, how are you getting a ground wire there?
 
Come to think of it, isn't 1929 early for breakers anyway? Wouldn't it have been fuses?
The OP says the wiring is from the 1920s, he does not mention the age of the panel nor how many circuits are in it.
 
I missed that in post 12, but where did the number of circuits come from?
Since a panel has odd number circuits on one side, and even on the other, we just figured when he said circuit #23 that there would have a even number #46 on the other. Of course he didn't say what kind the panel was, so it could just be one row of breakers.
 
Typical numbering is odds on left, even on right. 23 on left would indicate 46 circuit panel.
Not if it was a Pushmatic panel.
I am not aware of any residential panel UL listed with more than 42 circuits built prior to 2010ish.
 
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Not if it was a Pushmatic panel.
I am not aware of any residential panel UL listed with more than 42 circuits built prior to 2010ish.

Sounds like non-CTL tandems have possibly been added as others are thinking. Of course this is a violation.
 
Also...

Before about 10 years ago, the two breakers did not have to be next to each other and have a common disconnect. So, you cannot rely on the MWBC breakers being adjacent. Even now, someone could have installed it electrically properly, but not according to code as far as adjacent breakers and common disconnet is concerned.
Time flies, your 10 years ago has been about 20 years ago or even a little more. Handle ties on all MWBC's came required maybe 2005 NEC? Give or take one code cycle?

IIRC the handle tie was required even well before then if supplying devices on same yoke.
 
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