Newest Mystery
Newest Mystery
A lady called me yesterday and said that all the lights in her bedroom were out, the ceiling fan didn't work and the TV didn't work. I went over there and sure enough, she was right ? all the lights in her bedroom were out, at least on one circuit. I asked her what happened just before the lights went out and she said all the power in the house flickered and then the lights went out. The Lakes of Melbourne area has been having a lot of short-term power outages lately, so her description wasn't unusual. This lady has a real problem too because she is wheelchair bound while recovering from two broken ankles and her husband has severe Alzheimer's disease and does a lot of unpredictable things.
I opened the circuit breaker panel door and saw that the panel had the circuits marked. However, as it turned out, they were all marked wrong. Never mind. I saw a tripped 15 amp breaker and reset it. Wallah ? all the lights came one and the TV worked. I looked at all the receptacles in the bedroom and saw one with an extension cord plugged in and the cord was running under the desk leg. Thinking that the cord might have been crushed, I extracted the cord from the desk leg and it looked OK, probably because it was embedded in the carpet rather than being crushed. I couldn't find anything else obviously wrong, so I left her with a reset breaker, charged her nothing, and left.
She called me today and told me that the lights were out again, but that there was no flicker before they went out this time.
I went over there and the same breaker was tripped. When I reset it, it immediately tripped again. Great! I might stand a chance of finding the problem if it still exists. Again I asked her what happened just before the lights went out or what was different from when I left yesterday. She couldn't remember anything, so I started looking.
I removed the wire from the breaker and sure enough, I measured about 2 ohms to neutral, a nice solid short. Well, I started looking by going to each receptacle on the circuit in the master bedroom to see what was plugged in. I found nothing that looked unusual in the master bedroom, so I unplugged some things from the first receptacle and the short remained. Then I unplugged some things from the second receptacle and the short remained. Then I unplugged two cords (clock, power bed power) from the third receptacle. When I went back to the circuit breaker panel to look at my ohm meter, the short was gone. Ah-hah. I took my meter back to the cords that I had unplugged and checked each one. NO SHORTs. Must be in the receptacle. However, the receptacle is behind a very heavy power operated bed and I couldn't move the bed. I plugged my test light into the receptacle and reconnected the wire to the breaker and turned it on. Everything was OK. NO SHORT. I wiggled my test light in the receptacle and nothing bad happened. Now what?? I removed the test light and plugged in the bed and clock and all was OK. NO SHORT! What is going on?? All I did was remove two plugs, the short went away and the plugs weren?t shorted. I replaced the plugs and now the short is still GONE!
Well, I gave up in the master bedroom and moved to the adjacent bedroom. That bedroom also had several receptacles and a closet light on the same circuit. I checked two receptacles with the power ON and all seemed OK. Then I set the switch by the door to ON and the BREAKER BLEW. Hurrah!! I set the switch to OFF and reset the breaker and all was OK. I set the switch back to ON and the breaker blew. GREAT!! I turned the switch OFF and reset the breaker. Now I was getting somewhere.
I asked what the switch controlled and the lady said it controlled the light on the bed table. There was an extension cord plugged into the receptacle and it went to the light. I unplugged the extension cord from the receptacle and turned on the switch. The breaker didn't blow ? all was OK. I ohmed the end of the cord and sure enough the resistance was about 2 ohms. I unplugged the extension cord from the light cord and the extension cord was OK. I ohmed the light cord plug and that was OK too. I turned the light switch ON and still no short. WHAT'S GOING ON???
I removed the light bulb and noticed that the socket was a 3-way socket, however the light bulb was a standard (non 3-way) bulb. Looking closely, I noticed a ?" long scratch on the bottom of the outside of metal part of the bulb socket. On a non 3-way bulb the socket base wraps around the base of the bulb a little. On a 3-way bulb, the base ends near the bottom and there is a small toroidal space and then there is the ring for the second filament contact. Apparently, what was happening was that when they screwed the bulb in it barely missed coming in contact with the second filament contact in the socket. When the bulb heated up, apparently the base expanded a little and the outside portion of socket touched the second filament contact and caused a short. When the power went off the bulb cooled down and short went away.
My problem, in the master bedroom, with the short appearing and disappearing and when the lights went off (breaker tripped) two times before was due to the husband going in and out the second bedroom and turning the light switch ON and OFF. Since the bulb had to heat up before the short occurred, we didn't connect his comings and goings with the problem.
I replaced the lamp socket with a standard socket and all problems went away. Things are almost never what they seem to be or are reported to be.