starting to sound like switch he was flipping while playing with tester was red herring?I've seen it as well. However, when I asked to see said switch that turns off half the house, I was shown the panel in which turning on breaker #14 trips the main.
Dead short. Two different circuit.
All it takes is mixing up a box's feed in or feed out with a switch leg during a switch replacement.
1st thing I'd like to do would be smash "idiot pen"
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starting to sound like switch he was flipping while playing with tester was red herring?
Sounds like those old homes with spider junctions in ceiling lights branching to receptacles. Can never trace these to beginning of line for reset devices, since every receptacle outlet is end of line, comming from some j-box in ceiling lights. The only way to A/GFCI protect plugs, without every reset button buried behind furniture, is to punt to a panel flipper.All it takes is mixing up a box's feed in or feed out with a switch leg during a switch replacement.
yeah, but it was telling us something Dave....1st thing I'd like to do would be smash "idiot pen"
yeah, but it was telling us something Dave....
~RJ~
I would start in panel. Leave off all breakers that trip. Find what circuit 3 way switch is on. Using lead cord energize circuit , see what's on this circuit. Going down panel one circuit a time till you find other circuit.
You didn't say the tripped. Half the circuits can trip without tripping main. I will get back.
sorryYou didn't say the tripped. Half the circuits can trip without tripping main. I will get back.
When customer starts talking, plug ears and sing "La La LA" as loud as you can!So here's one lesson: Take what the customer says, not with a grain of salt but an entire block.
I would check panel ,then meter panel, check power from x-former , look at connections at pole. I would also check main breaker, maybe even put new one in.
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