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Henry St.Pierre Henry St.Pierre is offline
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Default Can improper wiring actually cause a fire?

Tim Douglass wrote in
:

On Wed, 13 Dec 2006 21:25:44 GMT, "Pop`"
wrote:

Tim Douglass wrote:
On Tue, 12 Dec 2006 04:50:26 GMT, "Toller" wrote:

As you all know, a troll hijacked one of my posts and kept
insisting that omitting a neutral on a pure 240v circuit would
cause a fire, which would invalidate the insurance.
But that brought up the question in my mind, can improper wiring
actually cause a fire?

Yes.

See here for one example:

http://www.douglassclan.com/ManufacturedHomeDanger.html


Ouch! I stopped to read that page, thinking it might have something
interesting or that I hadn't come across, and indeed, it did. The
amount of misinformation there is large, especially with the assumed
theories that were stated.
I don't doubt your initial experience as I've seen it myself, but
... I
think you exaggerated greatly and unfortunately made a lot of wrong
guesses about what what and why.
If you'd like some assistance in updating that page so it's
accurate and
usable as an FYI, I'm sure there are people here who would assist you
in that endeavor, myself included. As it stands, it's a badly
expressed example of a bad situation but your understanding of
electricity is obviously lacking and in need of improvement.


Please elucidate. I am actually quite experienced with electricity and
understand home wiring very well, but I was attempting to explain the
issue in a "dumbed-down" way so that it would be clear to anyone
reading it. I haven't looked at that page since I put it up a couple
years ago, but it passed muster with a couple of electrical
contractors who are friends of mine.

If you have corrections I would really like to hear about them. Either
post them here or e-mail me.

Thanks.
--
"We need to make a sacrifice to the gods, find me a young virgin...
oh, and bring something to kill"

Tim Douglass

http://www.DouglassClan.com




Also note that the amount of electricity that can flow through a system

is controlled by the amount of resistance on the circuit, with the most
basic factor controlling resistance being the size of the wire. If we
shrink the wire two things happen; first, less power gets through, and
second, the wire heats up at that point.

You wrote this? This is really a 'dumbed down' start. I stopped reading
after the above. I'm sure you are experienced with electricity and
understand home wiring very well, but your explanation of it needs work.
No offense meant.
Hank