I have a problem with the electrical wiring in the house I bought.. or several problems. The home inspector pointed out to me before I bought the house that there were 4 -110V circuits in the mail electrical panel that had been doubled up on the breaker and needed their own breaker. Seemed like a simple problem. He also pointed out that most every outlet in the house had the wrong polarity. Funny I thought AC voltage polarity changed at 60 hz. he said I should be able to fix these myself by disconnecting the breaker to the circuit, verifying that there was no voltage present and open the outlet behind the wall plates and switch the wires. I have yet to do this, and hope it isn't related to the biggie problem that has recently surfaced. So, I hired an electrician to address the breaker problem and he put in mini breakers which take up one space in the panel box and will accommodate two circuits since there are no more blanks in the breaker box. He came across one wire which he attempted to put on its own breaker and it tripped the breaker when he energised the main. So he said, this circuit is back-feeding, and he put the wire back where it came from with another on the one breaker... hmmm... So I paid him and he left. Everything has been working fine albeit the 300 dollar monthly bill this summer with the centraal AC running. When one day, I noticed that the condensing unit outside wasn't running and went to the thermostat to see if it was calling for cool which it was. I checked the outside disconnect by the unit and it had not tripped off, but reset it anyway and went back inside to set the thermostat to call for cool. The outside unit still did not come on. I did not check the voltage at the condensing unit. I did not open the cabinet and check for 24V at the contactor. I then, raised the thermostat to 90 so it did not call for cool and.. (here the weird part) the entire screened in porch section of the house went dead. All of the outlets had no voltage present. I then went back to the thermostat and lowered the temp to call for cool and the room was energized again. I feel like there is a problem in the air handler where the blower unit is, where the low voltage transformer is usually located, but do not know exactly where to begin to troubleshoot this weird phoenomena. So I suffered in the heat of the last month and a half of summer without AC... It is a Heat Pump, and cold weather is fast approaching, I switched off the breaker at the panel box.
Any Ideas?
Thanks.
Neil