ceb58
Senior Member
- Location
- Raeford, NC
I had a problem at work the other day with a breaker triping. 20amp circ. feeding recpts. cloth wire ran in ridged cond.,2 wire no egc about 40 years old. Things I knew, the home run landed in a box with a recpt. from there it split going up in cond. to feed 4 clock recpt. in 4 different rooms, the other wire went down and chained through 6 recpt. in 2 rooms. the rooms had work stations built over most of the recpts. Could not get to them except for tearing the work stations out. Trying to figure out where the fault was with out 2 days work tearing out and putting back the work stations. An older maint. mech. told me he would show me a easy way. We removed the panel cover, he removed the ungrounded cond. from breaker, he then put one cond. from a rubber lamp holder under the breaker. He then connected the other lead from the lamp holder to the wire. He had a 100w incond. bulb in the holder. We went to the box with the HR we disconnected the wire going down so only the clock recpt. would be on the circ. He closed the breaker all recpt. ok. We then reversed the connections to the wall recpt. closed the breaker, bulb lit up but breaker did not trip. He sad the fault was in the wall recpt. circ.
We then went to #5 recpt we could get to it easy. Disconnected the recp. and closed breaker. Lamp did not burn, recpt. 1 thru 4 were ok. He then said problem was between 5 and 6. Move a desk and pull #6 apart leaking pipe had filled cond. with water. Never seen the trick of using a lamp between breaker and fault befor
We then went to #5 recpt we could get to it easy. Disconnected the recp. and closed breaker. Lamp did not burn, recpt. 1 thru 4 were ok. He then said problem was between 5 and 6. Move a desk and pull #6 apart leaking pipe had filled cond. with water. Never seen the trick of using a lamp between breaker and fault befor