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02-09-2010, 06:26 PM | #1 |
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Question for an electrician - HELP!
I haven't been around here much lately, but I have a good reason...
We bought a house. An old house. A 90 year old house... I've been spending every last minute of my waking time on this place with very little time for the simple pleasures in life (beer and cigars). I'm a pretty handy person, but when it comes to electricity, I'm riding the short-bus. So on to my question: We've been tripping two of the breakers very often. One seems to control all of the 2nd floor and attic room along with the bathroom and laundry room. The other seems to control all of the outlets along one wall, which is where our toaster over and microwave are. I've figured out what all all of the breakers go to except 2. So we might have 2 open, but I doubt it (will probably do some testing this weekend). We've been running electric heaters due to insufficient insulation (another project I'm working on) and hate having to go the the basement crawl space to reset the breaker. Anyway, what are the options for cheaply fixing our issue of having too many outlets connected through one breaker? |
02-09-2010, 06:34 PM | #2 | |
Adjusting to the Life
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Re: Question for an electrician - HELP!
Sounds like your amps are too much for the breaker...A couple of things you need to find out:
1. do you have modern circuit breakers or fuses. If the latter I cannot help 2. do you have a 100 amp or 200 amp circuit breaker 3. Add up all your breakers and make sure they do not go over the total amps for your service. 4. If you have free breakers, move a few of the items to those breakers. 5. If you do not have, try to balance out the load a little.. 6. Balance by taking high amp items (toaster over, microwave) and splitting them onto breakers that do not have as much of a load. Keeping in mind that a 10 amp breaker cannot take as much as a 20 amp (I know duh) If you only have a 100 amp service, consider upgrading to a 200 amp service. can be done on your own for what 1000-2000 including all materials? Someone may have a better cost estimate. Hope this helps Quote:
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02-09-2010, 07:10 PM | #3 | |
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Re: Question for an electrician - HELP!
Thanks for the quick reply. I did my best to address a few of the points you made below:
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02-09-2010, 10:52 PM | #4 | |||
Adjusting to the Life
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Re: Question for an electrician - HELP!
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The balance comes from mapping what goes to each breaker, determining what amperage each item uses (internet search or owners manual) and arranging them so they are all placed to utilize the available amperage without overloading them. The Br2000 - I could not find any information, could it be a BR 2020 (twin pole 20 amp 120/240v) Quote:
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also try reading this and see if it helps at all...http://electronics.howstuffworks.com...it-breaker.htm |
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02-10-2010, 06:57 AM | #5 |
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Re: Question for an electrician - HELP!
Thank you so much! I'm going to open the box up this weekend and poke around. I hope it's 1/4 as easy as you make it sound.
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02-10-2010, 07:37 AM | #6 | |
Dear Lord, Thank You.
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Re: Question for an electrician - HELP!
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That said, don't mess with it. Take pics and have the guys look at it. On top of load, you have to consider wire weight, or the type/size of wire pulled throughout the house. For some reason, nowadays they pull 14 and 16 guage wire in houses, or have in the past. Why anyone would do that is beyond me, because it saves about 5 bucks on a job, but it happens. Odds are that your overloaded circuit is tripping because of wire size and not overload at the breaker. The best way to take care of it is to move the heaters off that circuit with the microwave and heavy load stuff. I wired this whole house when I remodeled it about 10 years ago. I pulled 12 wire everywhere. Despite that, I overload this circuit where my computer, fish tank, microwave and a million other things are. I put the dining room on the same circuit as the kitchen because I have an old breaker box with discontinued super expensive breakers. It was a good idea until I moved in here and plugged the whole world into one circuit. Just blew the breaker yesterday while I was warming my coffee in the microwave and had a space heater plugged in at my desk. The space heater is just one appliance too much. Your other (maybe not so) obvious option is to unplug the microwave. That way you'll know to turn off the heater before you use it, and no more crawling under the house.
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02-11-2010, 07:38 PM | #7 | |
Bomb'n relocation program
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Re: Question for an electrician - HELP!
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If you have a 42 circuit 200 amp panel, you could install 42 20 amp breakers if you want. This is because most circuits are not continuous loads. Breakers are sized to protect the wire. Wire is sized to serve the load. DO NOT PUT A 30 BREAKER TO FEED 15/20 AMP OUTLET.
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02-12-2010, 03:57 PM | #8 | |
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Re: Question for an electrician - HELP!
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the idea is to get the heavy hitting appliances on their own,,micro,,coffee..laundry...etc...the original circuit is probably fine for general items like tv,,lamps stereo..etc.....for now dont run to many things at once...hope this helps... |
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02-10-2010, 11:03 AM | #10 |
F*ck Cancer!
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Re: Question for an electrician - HELP!
As Scott has indicated this is certainly something that you can do, especially with the help of some BOTLs. Having said that, electricity can really F--- you over, so you might want to have an electrician come out and give you an estimate.
They have all of the tools and skills to make short work of your problem -- they see this kind of thing all the time. |
02-10-2010, 11:24 AM | #11 | |
Lebowski Urban Achiever
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Re: Question for an electrician - HELP!
Before you do any work research and abide by your local building codes.
For example: Chapter 56 Dallas Electrical Code Quote:
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02-10-2010, 11:31 AM | #12 | |
I'm nuts for the place
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Re: Question for an electrician - HELP!
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You do something wrong and there is a problem down the road, god forbid, your home owners insurance could decline the claim if everything isn't up to code. Anything more than rewiring an outlet or a switch I call a pro.
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02-10-2010, 11:35 AM | #13 |
Moderately Confused
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Re: Question for an electrician - HELP!
Don't forget, even if you turn the main off, you'll still have hot wires in the panel. You really shouldn't mess with electricity if you don't have an idea of what you're doing.
How many space heaters are you running on the second floor? Since it sounds like your house has been rewired, you should have at least two small appliance circuits in the kitchen. |
02-10-2010, 11:54 AM | #14 |
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Re: Question for an electrician - HELP!
Balancing loads is not nearly as simple as it sounds when you consider that most, if not all, of your circuits are likely daisy-chained from a single wire coming off of each breaker. As such balancing loads will require fishing new wires through the walls, tearing out walls, and other messy stuff.
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02-10-2010, 12:04 PM | #15 | |
Dear Lord, Thank You.
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Re: Question for an electrician - HELP!
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I just unplugged my heater. Problem solved.
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02-10-2010, 12:41 PM | #17 | |
Dear Lord, Thank You.
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Re: Question for an electrician - HELP!
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02-10-2010, 05:26 PM | #18 |
5 3 1
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Re: Question for an electrician - HELP!
Unless you have a clue as to what you are doing call a licensed Electrician. Check around, check the BBB etc.
No need to become a statistic.
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02-10-2010, 06:32 PM | #19 |
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Re: Question for an electrician - HELP!
Thanks guys. I'm pretty sure that in this house it is anything but easy to figure out what the hell is going on. The kitchen is actually an addition built some 20 years after the house, and certainly wasn't built to code (the 5 inch sloping floors are the first clue).
There are very few outlets in the house. Based upon that I was thinking that it could be pretty straight forward, but it seems that the two breakers that overload control just about everything we have plugged in. The microwave/toaster aren't on the same breaker as the heaters. My computer, tv, video games, etc are on that one. The heaters all seem to be on the same one though. We have two small and two large heaters (don't remember their amperage, but they do the job). We try not to have more than 2 on at any given time, but if two are on, and then the refrigerator cycles or something, we trip the breaker. Ideally I'd want to rewire the house with a larger box to spread them out more, but I don't have the couple of thousand dollars to do that, let alone the time and $$ to redo most of the interior walls. I wish there were a quick/cheap solution, but alas, there never seems to be. Thanks for all the help guys! |
02-10-2010, 06:41 PM | #20 |
Dear Lord, Thank You.
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Re: Question for an electrician - HELP!
Brian, if your breaker box is in the crawl space, and you have empty spaces for breakers, it doesn't get any easier than running some romex and setting some surface mount outlets on a dedicated circuit.
That would take the load off and wouldn't cost but a couple bucks for material. I wish I was closer, we could knock it out in no time. Even if you hired a guy to do it, it's not a big job at all. It'll take longer to drag tools back in the crawl space than to get it done. Literally. Have someone take a look at what you need done. Tell him you want a dedicated circuit and some easy to place surface mount outlets. Just a couple would help. Three would really take the load off. If you got really fancy, you could set a couple circuits worth of outlets and never have a problem again. Mind ya, I'm imagining a ranch style with the breaker box in the crawl space. Even if it's two story, breakers on the floor above the crawl space would help, I'd think. It really depends on the layout of the house and the extent of the crawl space.
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