Ask Experts Questions for FREE Help !
Ask
    dmx_rock_tech's Avatar
    dmx_rock_tech Posts: 6, Reputation: 3
    New Member
     
    #1

    Oct 31, 2010, 07:32 PM
    Do I have an open neutral or a bad breaker?
    Trying to give you as much info as possible for troubleshooting purposes. Here's what happened, what I've tried, and where I'm at:

    So for Halloween I put on a nice little light show for the trick or treaters. I had a few too many lights hooked up because after about 10 minutes, breaker 7B tripped (15A breaker = 120V @ 1800W). This happened probably 3 times. The only reason I allowed it to keep tripping was because there was so much time (5-7 minutes) between the trips. I figured if it was over the limit, it would pop immediately. So eventually, I removed a light (300W to be exact), and a few minutes later it tripped again. I removed another 300W and all was well for the rest of the night. Except...

    Breaker 7B is of course adjacent to breaker 7A. They're both 15A. It's a combo breaker. I had a 1500W load plugged into 7A (lights and a fog machine), but it never tripped. Near the end of the night circuit 7A died. Breaker 7A didn't trip. 7A is my living room. I ran an ext. cord into the garage from the living room to power the additional lights. My 3-prong circuit tester tells me the ground & hot are reversed. I know this is likely just an open neutral so I started looking for that. I rewired 4 outlets, cutting the wires out of the holes, and restripping them and wiring them to the screws. They are daisy-chained.

    Now with my 3-prong tester in the circuit, with all other loads removed, and the breaker on, I have one bright amber indicator, and one dim amber indicator. If they were both bright, all would be perfect. When I flip a light fixture on in the circuit, the bright one stays bright, the dim one goes out, and the RED one comes on bright (indicating the open neutral).

    I've checked the panel with the cover off. All screws seem tight. Do I have an open neutral? If so, how do I find it? Is it a bad breaker? If so, I'll replace it tomorrow. Thanks for the help.
    tkrussell's Avatar
    tkrussell Posts: 9,659, Reputation: 725
    Uber Member
     
    #2

    Nov 1, 2010, 05:00 AM

    You need a voltage tester to confirm whether a circuit breaker is defective, or if you have an open neutral.
    dmx_rock_tech's Avatar
    dmx_rock_tech Posts: 6, Reputation: 3
    New Member
     
    #3

    Nov 30, 2010, 02:44 PM
    I solved this one myself the next day. The breaker was fine. I measured the voltage going into it, and the voltage coming out of it. The breaker was doing its job. There was an outlet I missed. It was hiding under a table. It was the outlet nearest the light switch (which was also on the same circuit). Removing the wires from the push holes on the back of the outlet, and wiring hot and neutral to their respective side screws fixed it. It was indeed an open neutral thanks to those silly, weak push hole terminals on the back of the outlet. My advice is to always use the side screws.

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!

Do single pole breakers hook black to breaker and neutral & grd to bonded neutral bar [ 6 Answers ]

I have an Eaton Cutler-Hammer meter/breaker box. (MB816B200BTS-FLCH) I want to run a 20 amp circuit (underground wire) from this box through existing underground conduit to a receptacle for a dishwasher. This run would be app. 15' to 20' and from my main house panel it would be 40' to 50'. All...

Possible open neutral [ 11 Answers ]

The power in my home will work perfect for days even weeks then for no reason lights blink and power drops and surges occur.If a heater is on when it occurs ,the heater fails and TV even turns off until heater is turned off.When testing voltage during problem one cicuit will drop 10 to15 volts...

Open neutral [ 1 Answers ]

Hi When I test The neutral connection in motor starter panel I found Electricity in neutral line And the push botten didn't start motor What is the wrong and how can solve the problem Thanks

Open neutral [ 2 Answers ]

I have just changed my switches and plugs and have found that one plug on an outlet is showing open neutral. The problem plug is the one that is controlled by a switch. When the switch is off my tester shows "open neutral" but when the switch is on it show "correct". The other "hot" plug on the...

Open Neutral [ 2 Answers ]

I need some expert assistance... I think that I have an open neutral on the power company's side. They came out to look at it today and didn't fix anything, and I would like someone else to evaluate my conclusion before I call them tomorrow. This is a commercial building that I am...


View more questions Search