โJan-06-2016 05:46 PM
โJan-08-2016 11:58 AM
โJan-08-2016 07:55 AM
Bobbo wrote:wnjj wrote:
There's no good explanation for a red light on the 3-light tester in ANY receptacle that has the neutral and ground connected (which are ultimately directly shorted together in the main panel of the house).
The neutral and ground were not connected. The hot wire strands were touching the neutral screw. That is the whole problem I found in the system. The ground was not connected to either the hot or the neutral in any way.
Or am I misunderstanding?
โJan-08-2016 07:02 AM
wnjj wrote:
Either you did without knowing it or something is still wrong.... I'd make really sure something still isn't wired wrong, intermittent or reversed.... Unexplained symptoms always indicate a misunderstood problem.
โJan-08-2016 06:10 AM
wnjj wrote:
There's no good explanation for a red light on the 3-light tester in ANY receptacle that has the neutral and ground connected (which are ultimately directly shorted together in the main panel of the house).
โJan-07-2016 08:09 PM
Bobbo wrote:wnjj wrote:Bobbo wrote:
I agree that the symptoms are not explained. That is why I have posted this here, hoping someone with more knowledge can enlighten me.
The red light in the tester is a light bulb connected between neutral and ground. The only way I can see the red light coming on is if neutral is not connected to ground (and the strands power up the neutral). This could be an open in the plug, the receptacle it's plugged into or anywhere in the wiring all the way back to the main panel.
If the neutral and ground both have good connections from the receptacle you are testing all the way back to the main panel where ground and neutral are connected, it's not possible to have a voltage potential across that red light.
I think I'd plug s decent sized load into it and measure the voltage on everything.
Again:Bobbo wrote:
He wired everything correctly. BUT! He used stranded wire and did not get all of the strands under the screws in the plug. One or two of the strands from the hot wire were touching the neutral screw inside the plug.
And:Bobbo wrote:
I have already fixed the problem. Further testing of the old problem is not possible.
โJan-07-2016 06:58 PM
wnjj wrote:Bobbo wrote:
I agree that the symptoms are not explained. That is why I have posted this here, hoping someone with more knowledge can enlighten me.
The red light in the tester is a light bulb connected between neutral and ground. The only way I can see the red light coming on is if neutral is not connected to ground (and the strands power up the neutral). This could be an open in the plug, the receptacle it's plugged into or anywhere in the wiring all the way back to the main panel.
If the neutral and ground both have good connections from the receptacle you are testing all the way back to the main panel where ground and neutral are connected, it's not possible to have a voltage potential across that red light.
I think I'd plug s decent sized load into it and measure the voltage on everything.
Bobbo wrote:
He wired everything correctly. BUT! He used stranded wire and did not get all of the strands under the screws in the plug. One or two of the strands from the hot wire were touching the neutral screw inside the plug.
Bobbo wrote:
I have already fixed the problem. Further testing of the old problem is not possible.
โJan-07-2016 06:55 PM
โJan-07-2016 06:36 PM
Bud
USAF Retired
Pace Arrow
โJan-07-2016 06:30 PM
Bobbo wrote:
I agree that the symptoms are not explained. That is why I have posted this here, hoping someone with more knowledge can enlighten me.
โJan-07-2016 06:10 PM
โJan-07-2016 03:47 PM
enblethen wrote:
Try putting a three way plug tape or power strip into receptacle and then plug in tester to see if makes any difference.
Hiking Hunter wrote:
Bobbo -
When you originally tested the circuit you had a three light tester. Was the load you tested with (that didn't work) just a two wire ungrounded load?
โJan-07-2016 02:07 PM
โJan-07-2016 12:56 PM
Bud
USAF Retired
Pace Arrow
โJan-07-2016 12:43 PM
enblethen wrote:
How long is the run and what type of wire? It is possible that it could be induced current.