Honorarycarioca
Jul 25, 2014, 03:13 PM
I am remodelling my apartment and purchased some new baseboard heaters to install. Before installing the new ones I thought I should check out the existing wiring. It is only a small unit and the total of six existing heaters are fed by two separate circuits. One circuit acts as it is supposed to do (120V to Ground, 240V between Red and Black, or in this case White and Black, being old wiring). However, with the other circuit there is no voltage differential between ground and black and the heater casings are all live. Heaven only knows how long it has been like and thankfully no one has been shocked.
I then started going through each terminal box in the circuit to look for faulty connection but could not find any. Then I began disconnecting each leg from each other and eventually found that the first heater (in the circuit) is good if disconnected from the others but the ground becomes hot once the next leg (in fact, a junction box that serves a thermostat for the second heater) becomes live. In the absence of any faulty connections, I am thinking that there must be something like a nail through the wiring (behind the drywall) that has caused this fault. Does anyone have any other suggestions as to what I might test? Also, do I have many otpions other than to start ripping out drywall and pulling through new wires?
Of course, no circuit breaker has tripped, despite this fault. Presumbably because the panel is just seeing normal current flows?
All suggestions welcome.
I then started going through each terminal box in the circuit to look for faulty connection but could not find any. Then I began disconnecting each leg from each other and eventually found that the first heater (in the circuit) is good if disconnected from the others but the ground becomes hot once the next leg (in fact, a junction box that serves a thermostat for the second heater) becomes live. In the absence of any faulty connections, I am thinking that there must be something like a nail through the wiring (behind the drywall) that has caused this fault. Does anyone have any other suggestions as to what I might test? Also, do I have many otpions other than to start ripping out drywall and pulling through new wires?
Of course, no circuit breaker has tripped, despite this fault. Presumbably because the panel is just seeing normal current flows?
All suggestions welcome.