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John Grabowski John Grabowski is offline
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Default Partial power failure


"RBM" wrote in message
...
A customer called with an intermittent electrical problem: The electric
range and refrigerator on occasion stop working, then start working for no
apparent reason.
It's obvious that one of the hot legs is opening, as that would be the
only common denominator between a 120 volt refrigerator circuit, and a 240
volt range circuit. The customer was also unaware of a multitude of other
circuits that were also dead. Usually when I get these calls, I start with
the connections in the most hostile environment, 1) The overhead service
connections, 2) The outdoor meter socket, then check the main circuit
breaker. In this case the culprit was the main circuit breaker, which by
all outward appearance, looks fine. There was antiox paste on the
conductor connections, no hissing or crackling sounds, and the breaker was
cool to the touch. Upon removing the breaker, the problem became clear. A
bad connection (factory) between one pole of the breaker and the panel
buss, over time caused overheating and annealing of both the panel buss
and the copper contact of the breaker. Pictures to follow:
http://i17.photobucket.com/albums/b9...ldamage006.jpg

http://i17.photobucket.com/albums/b9...ldamage008.jpg

http://i17.photobucket.com/albums/b9...ldamage003.jpg

http://i17.photobucket.com/albums/b9...ldamage005.jpg




Thanks for posting Roy. Did you have to change the load center?