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Neautral wire overheating

KcBorne
Explorer
Explorer
A while back the neutral wire coming OUT of my EMS-HW30C surge protector was over heating. On 2 separate occasions I cut/cleaned the wire and secured as tight as i could in the terminal. Now the neutral wire is over heating on both the IN and the OUT terminals of the surge protector. Any ideas what could be causing the over heating?

I remember reading a while back that excessive cord length on the trailer can cause problems with the electrical. I added a 75ft cord to the trailers 40ft cord at one time for a total of 115ft. Can the excessive cord length be the cause of the neutral over heating? If not what else causes over heating like this?
19 REPLIES 19

MEXICOWANDERER
Explorer
Explorer
enblethen wrote:
You buss work appears to be extruded aluminum. You need to be using a good de-oxidation compound. Colloid copper may not be enough. Read label closely before applying to aluminum busss work.
The connectors for the cable entering your surge protector do not prevent the intrusion of moisture. You or manufactuer should seal to prevent moisture if used outdoors.





This is why I gave this advice above in this thread. In order. Cleaning the bore on the aluminum bus until it gleams is for people with a little patience. But conductivity is far higher than just squirting in a spritz of aluminum deoxidation compound. The synthetic oils in a good colloidal copper compound prevent the aluminum from oxidizing. I used this protocol on 3 phase 100 amp 254 volt services, located 200' from crashing tropical Pacific Ocean waves. Using an aluminum deoxidation liquid followed by colloidal copper is NOT recommended. Colloidal copper also has lasted ten years bonding a copper ground wire to a copper plated steel ground rod without corroding, next to the ocean. The colloidal copper compound is excellent for it's intended purpose...

Here is what I had written above...

"Disconnect from shore power and inverter, remove one wire at a time and ream the hole with the wire brush until it gleams."

wolfe10
Explorer
Explorer
Chris Bryant wrote:
I'll point out that basic electrical theory states that the current will be the same at all points in a circuit like that- the hot is carrying the same current as the neutral, and the current is the same at the plug, outlet, cord, etc. It is just a bad connection at the point of failure, and once it has overheated, you need to replace everything that got hot. The only thing a longer cord would do is drop the voltage a bit, causing just the air conditioner to draw more current, but it will not draw enough to burn up the wire- a breaker would trip far before that happened due to an over current situation.


Absolutely true-- for 30 amp service which is what the OP has.

But, with properly wired 50 amp service, the neutral carries only the DIFFERENCE between amps on L1 and L2. So there can be a very large difference in current, if for example both roof A/C's are running.
Brett Wolfe
Ex: 2003 Alpine 38'FDDS
Ex: 1997 Safari 35'
Ex: 1993 Foretravel U240

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vermilye
Explorer
Explorer
The problem started with the first failure, which was most likely a loose connection. No matter how hard you tried to clean up the connection, once a terminal is overheated, no matter how tight you make the connection, it will fail in the future. The contractor needs to be replaced. Since the failure was due to a loose connection, I would be surprised if Progressive repairs it under warranty, but it is worth a try.

Since most overheating is caused by loose connections, and a RV gets lots of vibration compared to a house, it is worth taking the time at least once a year to power down the RV & checking & retightening all the electrical connections including both 120V & 12V in your converter.

aruba5er
Explorer
Explorer
I think it started out as a bad connection on the white wire side of the contactor. See how the lug is twisted left. In tighting the temrinal it should be twisted right at least. Righty tighty remember. loose lug or loose wire in lug started it. Send it back to Progressive and maybe they can rebuild it for you. I always use an anti oxident on all wires and I take the lug screws out and give them a little too. In AC current the load shows up equally on both wires. There is no plus or minus. This trouble was because of a loose connection somewhere right at the contactor. wire in, wire out, contacts themselves?

Chris_Bryant
Explorer
Explorer
I'll point out that basic electrical theory states that the current will be the same at all points in a circuit like that- the hot is carrying the same current as the neutral, and the current is the same at the plug, outlet, cord, etc. It is just a bad connection at the point of failure, and once it has overheated, you need to replace everything that got hot. The only thing a longer cord would do is drop the voltage a bit, causing just the air conditioner to draw more current, but it will not draw enough to burn up the wire- a breaker would trip far before that happened due to an over current situation.
-- Chris Bryant

Ranger_Smith
Explorer
Explorer
KcBorne wrote:
I guess i can try these 2:colloidal copper compound and reaming the bus bar. The screws are snug and the wires appear clean. My surge protector is shot from these 3 meltdowns. Thank God for the lifetime warranty! Hopefully progressive don't try to weasel out of it. I've had that experience with warranties before.



That thing is shot. I wouldn't waste my time or safety with that. That big black device is a contactor. you could have some oxidation on the neutral line contact causing high resistance which is causing the heat.
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SCVJeff
Explorer
Explorer
That's the contractor, not a buss. Looks to me like a simple case of carboned up and consequently overheated contacts internally. I doubt this has anything to do with the lugs themselves.
Jeff - WA6EQU
'06 Itasca Meridian 34H, CAT C7/350

pianotuna
Nomad II
Nomad II
Hi,

What is the voltage at the shore power outlet? What is the voltage at the RV?
Regards, Don
My ride is a 28 foot Class C, 256 watts solar, 556 amp-hours of Telcom jars, 3000 watt Magnum hybrid inverter, Sola Basic Autoformer, Microair Easy Start.

Sea_scape
Explorer
Explorer
Hard to guess at answers, but a couple of comments;

-don't assume the bus bar, or terminal block is aluminum. Most these days aren't, but are alloy or plated copper.
-clean the block, but don't get aggressive. You don't want to damage plating or create ridges
-it is hard to get good connections on wire or blocks that have overheated, because of material characteristic change. Generally recommend replacing the overheated parts.
-is your system 50 A or 30 A? If it is 50 A and the surge protector is connected incorrectly, the neutral could be carrying more current than the phase.
-I would be surprised if this problem is caused by long extension cord. That causes voltage drop and can cause connection to overheat. You may just have bad luck, but I am surprised to see two neutral connections that overheated, and no overheating in the phase.
-is there evidence of overheating in the distribution panel, or just in the surge protector?

From the pictures, it appears the phase and neutral connections are made the same way so it is surprising to see the issue only in the neutral. Is there anything else connected to the circuit and have you checked all of the incoming wiring. As I said, one bad connection I can see understand, but two on the same wire indicates higher current than expected (but doesn't negate bad workmanship).

Finally, some loads can result in harmonics that will overheat the neutral, but this occurs usually in 110/220 circuit.

Good luck

You_can_t_take_
Explorer
Explorer
KcBorne wrote:
I remember reading a while back that excessive cord length on the trailer can cause problems with the electrical. I added a 75ft cord to the trailers 40ft cord at one time for a total of 115ft. Can the excessive cord length be the cause of the neutral over heating? If not what else causes over heating like this?

Bingo! Your wiring with the extension is much too long! If you need it that long, you will need to increase the wire size at least one gauge larger. Two sizes would be better.
1960's: Tents.. 1970's: Soft top & Hard top P/U.. 1980's: 17' RV.. 1990's: 24' RV.. 2000's: 2002 Cougar 276EFS; 2005 Laredo 29GS; 2002 GMC 2500HD Ext Cab 4x4; 2015: 2006 Class 'B' Chateau Citation; "(Nfld/Labrador-Yukon/NWT/Alaska-Gaspe', Que./Florida!!)

Bob_Landry
Explorer
Explorer
It's unlikely hat the EMS is causing the problem. Properly done screw connections offer no more resistance than any other point in the system. I would go back and double check everything you did before the problem started. My guess is that the extra length of extension cords is causing the problem, or that possibly the additional cord is made with the wrong size wire. All 30A cable has to be 10g a, even the neutral. A shore power cord over 100' should be a size larger.
You are going to have to start eliminating components until you find what is causing it. Remove the EMS, you are going to have to anyway to repair or replace it. Reconnect the wires and use a clamp on meter to measure currents. Turn off all of the AC breakers and begin turning them on one at a time and see if you have an appliance or device that is drawing excessive current. Do the same thing with and without the new extension cord. it sounds like a complicated process, but it's simply eliminating one potential problem at a time. You may need to enlist the help of an electrical savvy person to do this.

Somewhere you are going to find a neutral wire that is undersized or a high resistance connectionand causing to much current to be drawn.
2011 Keystone Outback 277RL

enblethen
Nomad
Nomad
You buss work appears to be extruded aluminum. You need to be using a good de-oxidation compound. Colloid copper may not be enough. Read label closely before applying to aluminum busss work.
The connectors for the cable entering your surge protector do not prevent the intrusion of moisture. You or manufactuer should seal to prevent moisture if used outdoors.

Bud
USAF Retired
Pace Arrow


2003 Chev Ice Road Tracker

MEXICOWANDERER
Explorer
Explorer
IN and OUT are the two highest amperage loaded points in the circuit. I go to the hardware store and purchase appropriate size tubular wire brushes to fit the holes. Disconnect from shore power and inverter, remove one wire at a time and ream the hole with the wire brush until it gleams. Scrape the wire strands bright shiny clean with a utility knife. Brush on the colloidal copper and tighten the set screw. You need not do this to the two holes with the long screws that attach the buss to the fixture.

Next, do the POSITIVE feed wire in and out connections. You'll have to "Do Them All" In and out wires. Then go do the buss and feeds in your fuse and breaker panel. Do this once and do it right. But you do need to re-check to make sure something weird is not causing the set screws to loosen. I "trust" nothing.

TIN plating is only moderately effective in stopping corrosion and electrolysis. Copper can be used in a DIRECT aluminum to copper termination or junction. Gold, is invincible except with aqua rigea (don't give me a hard time with this SPELL CHECKER!) but we know how that goes, sigh.

All Hardware stores of note sell colloidal copper "assembly" compounds in various sizes from blit tubes to tubs.

It's nice to do something once, do it correctly, then do plop in a lounger by the pool crack open a brewskie and say "ahhhh"

KcBorne
Explorer
Explorer
I guess i can try these 2:colloidal copper compound and reaming the bus bar. The screws are snug and the wires appear clean. My surge protector is shot from these 3 meltdowns. Thank God for the lifetime warranty! Hopefully progressive don't try to weasel out of it. I've had that experience with warranties before.