View Single Post
  #18   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
Twayne[_3_] Twayne[_3_] is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 198
Default Electric Problem or overloading the circuit

In ,
Mikepier typed:
First, make sure you do not have 20A breakers on 14 guage wire. If you
do, change them to 15A breakers now. Thats what could be causing your
conduit to get hot.


Hot conduit is NOT a sign of wrong amperage breakers! Hot conduit means
there is a LOT of current trying to find earth ground! There should never
be any current in it under non-fault conditions and to get hot, it's a hell
of a LOT of current. I think there's more to it than those two breakers
unless it's the case that one ganged breaker cannot overcome the
non-overloaded one to open them up. Compliance labs routinely test conduit
for 60A withstand, measureing voltage across every joint encountered, and
the conduit never heated up. Something's awfully wrong and IMO very
DANGEROUS there.

Second, you should only have a double pole breaker for 220V circuits.
Although technically it will still work for seperate 110V circuits,
it's not proper practice.
Also you might have an Edison circuit, that is 2 circuits sharing 1
neutral, so its possible that even though you shut off 1 or 2 breakers
to a circuit, the neutral is still being used for your live circuit.
So the space heater you were using upstairs could be using the same
neutral for the circuits that you shut off. You need find out how your
lines were run, particularly in that junction box.


Thus it's a seriously miswired and dangerous ckt; agreed.

--
--
We've already reached
tomorrow's yesterday
but we're still far away from
yesterday's tomorrow.