Fulthrotl
~Autocorrect is My Worst Enema.~
- Occupation
- E
A call today was for shock from air conditioning outdoor unit. I read 10 volts from unit to probe stuck in ground.
Turning off clothes dryer breaker made voltage go away, or leaving breaker on and unplugging clothes dryer.
I expected a reading with ohmeter between either hot prong of dryer plug and ground/neutral prong but showed infinite.
Several times to confirm I unplugged dryer, saw voltage go away, plugged back in, saw it come back, same redundant checks with breaker.
I would have expected the fact that neutral and ground were together at dryer to be contributing factor, must not have anything to do with it since they are still connected when breaker is off.
Any theories?
you have two different 240 volt circuits off the same panel
with the same symptom. hm.
what else in the house is 240 volt? range? oven?
check those... betcha they have 10 volts floating on them
when the dryer is plugged in. just a hunch you are backfeeding
every 240 volt load in the house.
if you unplug the dryer, as you say, and with the dryer
circuit hot, you don't have any floating voltages, and the
dryer introduces a 10 volt float to ground.... i'd put a wire
from the AC to a ground where you are reading the delta,
and put an amprobe on it to see how much current it's drawing.
not 'cause that information will help troubleshooting, but i'm curious... ;-)
the problem is in the appliance, if it disappears when unplugged...
i suspect a short to ground on the heating element, enough
to give a tingle. probably not in the control circuit.
that's my nickels worth.
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