Ask Experts Questions for FREE Help !
Ask
    desalad's Avatar
    desalad Posts: 8, Reputation: 1
    New Member
     
    #1

    Sep 2, 2005, 01:06 PM
    Am I overloading a circuit?
    I just bought a house and moved in last week. It was hot and humid up here in the northeast so I had an window A/C unit (5,000 BTU) cranking in one of the bedrooms. Every time the unit's compressor kicked in, lights in other parts of the house dimmed. This is my first home and I'm just starting to learn about the house's electrical and wiring. What would cause this flicker in the power?

    Thanks in advance.

    Scott
    tkrussell's Avatar
    tkrussell Posts: 9,659, Reputation: 725
    Uber Member
     
    #2

    Sep 2, 2005, 01:41 PM
    The ac unit probably has a nameplate amp draw of about 5-6 amps. When a air conditioner , which is a refrigeration motor, starts, it has a LRA ) locked rotor amperage) of 6-10 time the running load of 5 amps. This high draw is only for a brief moment, but this is the reason for the lights flickering. The high amp draw causes the voltage to sag proportional, so the lights, probabaly incandescent, react to the momentary voltage drop. The light output dims as the voltage dips, then the light output returns to normal as the voltage returns to normal.

    The one way of eliminating the lights flickering would be to have a separate dedicated circuit, with no lights on that circuit, for the AC. This may not be practical to install, and really is not necessary, as long as you can live with the lights flickering. Just because the lights flicker, does not mean the circuit is overloaded. If the circuit was, the circuit breaker, which I suspect is a 15 amp for a bedroom, would trip.

    Seems that if this is an older home, there is a bit more lighting on the circuit than if the home was newer.

    Try to determine the total amount of load on the circuit the AC is using, to determine if the circuit is overloaded. Add up any device, appliance, lamp on the circuit, using the wattage or the amps. You need to get back to me to do the calcs, unless you know Ohm's Law to convert watts to amps and vice versa. The max load on a 15 amp circuit is 12 amps or 1440 watts.

    Hope this helps, get back with any other questions you may have.
    desalad's Avatar
    desalad Posts: 8, Reputation: 1
    New Member
     
    #3

    Sep 28, 2005, 01:16 PM
    I'm still working on the mapping of the electrical system by the way... I hope to have it finished soon, I haven't been home long enough during daylight hours to kill all the power and map out the place.

Not your question? Ask your question View similar questions

 

Question Tools Search this Question
Search this Question:

Advanced Search

Add your answer here.


Check out some similar questions!

Circuit breaker [ 3 Answers ]

A circuit breaker connected to the kitchen tripped twice. I had an electrician in but the problem persists - in fact, the very day the electrician came. It does not seem to be caused by any one particular appliance. The first time I was using the waste disposal and the next two times nothing was...

Lights out but circuit is hot [ 1 Answers ]

Here is the situation, 2 wall outlets, 1 fluorescent, and 9 celing cans all on the same circuit. 6 of the cans are controlled by a pair of 3 way switches, the other three on single pole switches. Nothing works. The circuit breaker doesn't trip and I have reset it several times. What happens is...

Gfi circuit [ 1 Answers ]

I was wondering if when wiring for 2 gfis for different circuits, do I need separate neutrals for each or just a common one

Outside GFI circuit - 15amp outlet on 20amp circuit [ 1 Answers ]

I need a better understanding of what I should do when setting up my new outdoor circuit. I've got a circuit that runs about 150 feet, so I'm installing 10g wire to allow for the voltage drop. I read in the Home Depot Electrical 123 book that I can have at most a 15amp circuit with 10g wire on...

Circuit breakers [ 2 Answers ]

I would like to up grade the amps going to my garage so I can run my saws and power tools with out dimming my shop lights. I currently have a old style fuse box in the garge feed with 12ga uf cable run off a 20amp circuit breaker in the service panel. My plans are to replace the fuse box with a new...


View more questions Search