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Subject Author Date
Electrical problems Mikko Peltoniemi 05-07-2008
|--> Re: Electrical problems Mikko Peltoniem...05-07-2008
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Posted by David Nebenzahl on May 7, 2008, 11:09 pm
On 5/7/2008 7:03 PM Mikko Peltoniemi spake thus:

> Actually, it turned out to be a bad connection next to the GFI outlet,
> which was still working. Who would've known that all the power to
> my computers was actually going through the bathroom...

When you have the electrician come over, you might want to have them fix
that situation. I had a customer with a similar situation; their
bathroom outlet went out, along with the lights in their garage. Turned
out to be a GFCI outlet in the outside of the garage with all those
things wired downstream of it, which made no sense.

It's a very simple fix.


--
The best argument against democracy is a five-minute
conversation with the average voter.

- Attributed to Winston Churchill

Posted by RBM on May 8, 2008, 6:59 am

> On 5/7/2008 7:03 PM Mikko Peltoniemi spake thus:
>
>> Actually, it turned out to be a bad connection next to the GFI outlet,
>> which was still working. Who would've known that all the power to
>> my computers was actually going through the bathroom...
>
> When you have the electrician come over, you might want to have them fix
> that situation. I had a customer with a similar situation; their bathroom
> outlet went out, along with the lights in their garage. Turned out to be a
> GFCI outlet in the outside of the garage with all those things wired
> downstream of it, which made no sense.

Actually, it makes perfect sense. Depending upon the date when the house was
built, and the electric codes at that time. The most economical (cheap)
method of wiring the required GFCI protected outlets was to run the fewest
required circuits, to the fewest required GFCI devices. Kitchen circuits,
when first required were within 6 foot of the sink, and 20 amp, but most
other circuits were general lighting circuits, so it was common to find the
required GFCI outlet in the garage, next to the breaker panel feeding the
outside outlets and all the bathroom outlets, and if the circuit wasn't to
taxed, it may feed a few more lights or outlets
>
> It's a very simple fix.
>
>
> --
> The best argument against democracy is a five-minute
> conversation with the average voter.
>
> - Attributed to Winston Churchill



Posted by Frank on May 8, 2008, 8:59 am

> So I was on the computer, then all of a sudden I hear BOOM, like an
> circuit breaker tripping, and everything went quiet. The computer
> was off.
>

Whenever I hear a BOOM (like a bomb blast) I know the whole neighborhood
goes down without power, either mine or another neighborhood down stream on
another feeder. That BOOM comes from an adjacent substation tripping a high
voltage, high current circuit breaker. So breakers do go BOOM, just not the
little house breakers.




Posted by Mikko Peltoniemi on May 8, 2008, 6:28 pm
Frank wrote:

> Whenever I hear a BOOM (like a bomb blast) I know the whole neighborhood
> goes down without power, either mine or another neighborhood down stream on
> another feeder. That BOOM comes from an adjacent substation tripping a high
> voltage, high current circuit breaker. So breakers do go BOOM, just not the
> little house breakers.

Since all it turned out to be was a loose wire, I can only assume the
boom that I heard was actually a door slamming. That door slam then
rattled the wire just enough to become undone, and thus breaking the
circuit...

Posted by Red Green on May 8, 2008, 10:58 pm

> Frank wrote:
>
>> Whenever I hear a BOOM (like a bomb blast) I know the whole
>> neighborhood goes down without power, either mine or another
>> neighborhood down stream on another feeder. That BOOM comes from an
>> adjacent substation tripping a high voltage, high current circuit
>> breaker. So breakers do go BOOM, just not the little house breakers.
>
> Since all it turned out to be was a loose wire, I can only assume the
> boom that I heard was actually a door slamming. That door slam then
> rattled the wire just enough to become undone, and thus breaking the
> circuit...


How bout some more details. Loose wire in a light, outlet? Another
notorious back-stabbed outlet?

Page 4 of 5       < 1 2 3 > last >>
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