drummer4468
Pre-takeoff checklist
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- Jul 5, 2020
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drummer4468
So I'm trying to figure out some problems with a very old fuse box in my garage.
The first indication of an issue was that a GFCI outlet didn't work at all. Not sure if that's related yet, but possibly.
Opened the 4-circuit fuse box and read the voltage in all sockets, three read around 120V between terminals and about 240V between the two hot posts as expected, but the top left one is reading about 68V post-to-collar. (Forgive my terminology if not proper, "post" refers to the vertical center contact bar, and "collar" refers to the contact the fuse screws into).
Readings were taken with no loads on this circuit except for a few LED shop lights, and everything works fine except that outlet.
I have not opened up the box itself to expose the wiring yet (almost afraid to, with how the rest of this house is wired), that can wait till daylight so I can have power off and not hold a flashlight. Anything in particular I should look for? I'd say it's gotta be corrosion or short-to-ground, but I would imagine a short or mis-wiring bad enough to drop the voltage by half on one phase would trip the breaker, no?
The first indication of an issue was that a GFCI outlet didn't work at all. Not sure if that's related yet, but possibly.
Opened the 4-circuit fuse box and read the voltage in all sockets, three read around 120V between terminals and about 240V between the two hot posts as expected, but the top left one is reading about 68V post-to-collar. (Forgive my terminology if not proper, "post" refers to the vertical center contact bar, and "collar" refers to the contact the fuse screws into).
Readings were taken with no loads on this circuit except for a few LED shop lights, and everything works fine except that outlet.
I have not opened up the box itself to expose the wiring yet (almost afraid to, with how the rest of this house is wired), that can wait till daylight so I can have power off and not hold a flashlight. Anything in particular I should look for? I'd say it's gotta be corrosion or short-to-ground, but I would imagine a short or mis-wiring bad enough to drop the voltage by half on one phase would trip the breaker, no?