jeff43222
Senior Member
- Location
- Minneapolis, Minnesota
I had a job today where I had to solve the problem of a breaker tripping every time the bathroom light got turned on. When I flipped the switch, I heard a buzz, saw the light go on briefly, then the breaker tripped. When I got into the attic, I found plenty of evidence of one or more squirrels having spent significant time there. The salient evidence was the cable from the light switch to the fixture. There was a good eight inches gnawed down to the bare wires; this turned out to be the source of the short.
It occurred to me that the squirrel might not have been so successful or tenacious if the light had been wired with a switch loop rather than having power feed from the switch, as a switch-looped cable will always have at least one hot conductor in it.
I'm curious if anyone takes this kind of thing into consideration when designing light circuits. I generally design circuits according the best way to run the wire, not the best way to foil gnawing rodents.
[ July 18, 2005, 11:14 PM: Message edited by: jeff43222 ]
It occurred to me that the squirrel might not have been so successful or tenacious if the light had been wired with a switch loop rather than having power feed from the switch, as a switch-looped cable will always have at least one hot conductor in it.
I'm curious if anyone takes this kind of thing into consideration when designing light circuits. I generally design circuits according the best way to run the wire, not the best way to foil gnawing rodents.
[ July 18, 2005, 11:14 PM: Message edited by: jeff43222 ]