Ask Experts Questions for FREE Help !
Ask
    KateMPowers's Avatar
    KateMPowers Posts: 2, Reputation: 1
    New Member
     
    #1

    Jul 29, 2013, 05:29 AM
    Distiguishing Hot, Neutral & ground w/ 3 white wires
    I have 3 white (12) wires coming in to the shed. I have determined which one is the hot but how do I determine which of the remaining 2 is the neutral or ground?
    Thank you!
    ma0641's Avatar
    ma0641 Posts: 15,675, Reputation: 1012
    Uber Member
     
    #2

    Jul 29, 2013, 05:47 AM
    Please don't start a new thread to add additional comments. Whomever installed the 3 white wires was obviously not an electrician. Code would have required color markings. Since you have determined hot, you need to use a continuity or circuit tester to find neutral and ground. The simplest way is to disconnect one of the non hot wires in the panel box and then test for 120 volts between two of the remaining wires. As to your other questions from the first post, with all you want to run, AC, outlets, fans pump etc. 12 is likely not enough for 1 circuit. Do not try to put a larger breaker on that circuit. Have a competent person determine what you need and do the work.
    donf's Avatar
    donf Posts: 5,679, Reputation: 582
    Printers & Electronics Expert
     
    #3

    Jul 30, 2013, 11:21 AM
    WRT - your question. It is a violation of the NEC to use all white conductors and there are only certain conditions where a white conductor can be re-tasked by permently coloring both ends of the conductor wherever it is visible.

    The only correct process you should use is to have a new cable with the proper conductors pulled from the service panelboard to the device box and then make the proper connections.

    First, are the conductors feeding a 120 Vac load or a 240 Vac load?

    If it is a 120 then you shoud have one Hot, one Neutral and usually a bare ground.

    Step one, turn the breaker for this circuit off. Then turn the entire panelboard OFF and remove the panelboiard's top cover. Please be very aware that even with the panelboard main breaker in the OFF position there are still Live connections within the panelboard. The only real way to completley shut the panelboard down would be to pull the meter.

    At the branch circuit breaker for this circuit dentify the white conductor on the breaker and either color it "Black" or wrap some black tape on it.

    Next, at the fixture using an ohm meter, place one probe fron the meter on one of the white conductors and one probe on the metal grouind of the box holding the device.. If you get a zero "0" reading opn one conductor, then you have fround your equipment grounding conductor, mark this cable with a green coloriung. The other conductor is your White (Neutral) conductor.

    If you are sure not how to accomplish the above, call an electrician.

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!

When I test from hot to neutral I get 110v but from hot to ground it trips the breake [ 1 Answers ]

I wired up a ceiling fan and it didn't work. I took the switch box apart to see which was the hot and which was the switch leg. When I tested from hot to neutral I got 110v and when I tested from hot to ground it tripped the breaker. I tested on a receptacle on a different circuit and got the same...

20 Volts Neutral to Ground & 100 volts Neutral to Hot [ 1 Answers ]

My outlets that have been working fine in my new house for 12 years suddenly went dead. I checked the breaker and it was not tripped. I measured the voltage and found 100 VAC from neutral to hot. I then measured Neutral to ground and found 20 VAC and 120 VAC from Hot to ground. Some how I am...

What causes neutral wires to become hot? [ 4 Answers ]

What causes neutral at a switch to become hot?

Ground and neutral Wires [ 9 Answers ]

Is it proper to connect the ground and neutral to the neutral buss? I am installing a sub panel from a 200amp svc to a 125 service using 6g. My sub box does not have a separate ground buss rather only 2 neutral buses with a crossbar. I was informed that I can put the neutral and ground on that...

Open neutral - 3 wires; white as hot? [ 1 Answers ]

OK, I've encountered an oddly wired outlet in my kitchen and am trying to replace it with a GFCI. I unwired the old outlet, taking note of where things were attached, just in case. I wired the GFCI acoording to instructions and then checked the wiring with a Sperry GFI checker. All seemed OK. ...


View more questions Search