STB
Guru
So, I was on a friend's sailboat, there to fix an outlet that stopped working. He'd tried to fix it and found a "black wire disconnected in the main panel, out an end on it, and connected it somewhere on the black bus". He didn't remember where.
I found a couple of other AC wires pulling out of their connectors and sparking and corrected them. And then found that the outlet wire had been connected to the refrigerator breaker and moved it. That fixed the problem. No one knows how it moved itself, but he doesn't think it is the one he attached, because the connector is old.
As I was checking over the panel, I found the 12v wire from the breaker to the bus to be very hot. None of the screws holding the breakers to the bus side were tightened at all. They were mostly unscrewedans arcing could be seen when wiggled. I corrected that. He has no idea how long it has been that way
He thinks, maybe, since the PO rewired years ago.
I also noticed...and here is my question....the reverse polarity LED (tiny) light is on if, and only if, the main 120v breaker is off and /any/ one or more 120v branch breaker is on. It is off when the main is on or if all branches are off. I got as far as checking the pedestal, shore power cable, and inlet, as well as swapping pedestals and cables. I also put his meter from N-G and got ~0-Ohm when connected to the pedestal and, when the problem was occurring, ~62v N-G...but I believe that was likely a ghost reading from inductance or capacitance and didn't have my gear to load it and see. Also, the reverse polarity light was brighter the higher up in the panel the breaker I turned on. He reported that he never saw it before and thinks it must be related to whatever wire he connected. But, I'm not sure he ever looked at the breaker panel in that state.
I won't be able to go look again for a few days, but when I do, I'll be able to bring my own toolbar, etc, and spend time on it. By the time I noticed it last time it was already past time to go.
So...I'm not dealing with reverse polarity. Anyone seen this before? Any guesses? I'm almost wondering if it is the circuit-on LEDs, themselves. This seems like it'll be fun to trouble shoot.
And, yes, I know the whole thing needs gone through. I just mentioned the other issues to give the sense that anything and everything is on the table.
I found a couple of other AC wires pulling out of their connectors and sparking and corrected them. And then found that the outlet wire had been connected to the refrigerator breaker and moved it. That fixed the problem. No one knows how it moved itself, but he doesn't think it is the one he attached, because the connector is old.
As I was checking over the panel, I found the 12v wire from the breaker to the bus to be very hot. None of the screws holding the breakers to the bus side were tightened at all. They were mostly unscrewedans arcing could be seen when wiggled. I corrected that. He has no idea how long it has been that way
He thinks, maybe, since the PO rewired years ago.
I also noticed...and here is my question....the reverse polarity LED (tiny) light is on if, and only if, the main 120v breaker is off and /any/ one or more 120v branch breaker is on. It is off when the main is on or if all branches are off. I got as far as checking the pedestal, shore power cable, and inlet, as well as swapping pedestals and cables. I also put his meter from N-G and got ~0-Ohm when connected to the pedestal and, when the problem was occurring, ~62v N-G...but I believe that was likely a ghost reading from inductance or capacitance and didn't have my gear to load it and see. Also, the reverse polarity light was brighter the higher up in the panel the breaker I turned on. He reported that he never saw it before and thinks it must be related to whatever wire he connected. But, I'm not sure he ever looked at the breaker panel in that state.
I won't be able to go look again for a few days, but when I do, I'll be able to bring my own toolbar, etc, and spend time on it. By the time I noticed it last time it was already past time to go.
So...I'm not dealing with reverse polarity. Anyone seen this before? Any guesses? I'm almost wondering if it is the circuit-on LEDs, themselves. This seems like it'll be fun to trouble shoot.
And, yes, I know the whole thing needs gone through. I just mentioned the other issues to give the sense that anything and everything is on the table.