![]() |
House breakers tripping in a storm...
What causes multiple homes in one neighborhood to trip the breakers? It’s the only neighborhood that does it and I’ve never seen it before. It’s not every breaker, but 3-4 every time. HVAC thermostats, appliance clocks, etc. have to be reset.
I’m also getting complaints about lights flickering every so often. |
Ground fault caused by rain water?
|
Bad neutral or bad transformer connection. Power company problem.
Lights flickering? |
Leaky Transformer was my first guess.
Flickering lights is usually a switching problem. |
Good ideas. Thanks.
Would the arc fault and/or GFCI breakers be another reason. It’s strange that it’s just this one neighborhood. Next time, I need to count and list what breakers trip in each home to see if there is a common denominator. |
We had the same issue. Duke Energy finally fixed it by replacing a transformer, after years of complaints.
|
"House Breakers tripping in a storm"
I don't know where my head was at this morning when I read this, but the first images that came to mind were burglars getting high during inclement weather. :confused: Please return to scheduled programming. Best Les |
I suspect an issue with the neutral line, possibly corroded connection, that worsens with a storm. That will 'unbalance the load' causing a higher voltage on 1 leg, lower on the other. A simplified explanation is they provide approximately 230 V to a house, neutral is in between, 115+115 = 230. Neutral keeps it balanced. If the neutral has resistance, there will be a voltage 'drop' depending on current drawn, but the 230(ish) won't change. could end up with 130 + 100 = 230. I think another user here had the same problem, maybe Baz?
My son had that issue, lights flickering, sometimes bright and burning out. We could actually measure higher voltages on 1 leg of the power. Power company finally sent someone out and they found a bad neutral outside. |
Breakers in the tripped position needing to be reset?
I would guess low voltage. |
Quote:
Quote:
Low power can nuke home appliances like fridges A/C etc at your own expense. Contact your neighbors and get some collective evidence. There may be trees which need trimng as well. Document. Write a certified letter to the power company demanding immediate repairs. There were some bad transformers around here which buzzed loudly until they broke. Something blew up at a neabye substation which sounded like a distant bomb and everyone lost power during one storm. They finally fixed most of it, but we had sketchy power for a while as well. |
Here in earthquake country, after they occur you get low voltage.
I always disconnect my home's power for a bit and monitor the voltage. The Big Bear quake damaged a lot of appliances in our neighborhood. |
Here in my part of PA power delivery is horrible. Incoming voltage fluctuates wildly. We had a storm last week and lost power - flipped multiple breakers, including 2 220v breakers for my well pumps. When I flipped them back on, one well pump controller immediately fried (sparks flew across basement) - the other one I saw a bright flash but it's still working. This is not the first time this has happened....seems like just prior to power going out there is often a surge that gets trapped? 2 years ago I lost both controllers, a range hood and a treadmill. Same scenario each time...flipping breakers back on seemed to release a "surge" that immediately fried whatever was on that circuit. This time it cost me one well controller and a dishwasher. Getting old! And, I have whole house surge protectors on the breaker box as well as lightning suppression and somehow this still happens.
|
Quote:
After black/brown outs wait half an hour for the grid to stabilize before turning stuff back on, I've been told. Start with expendable lights first. |
Quote:
|
| All times are GMT -8. The time now is 04:24 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2026, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.6.0
Copyright 2025 Pelican Parts, LLC - Posts may be archived for display on the Pelican Parts Website