Riceburner
Well-known member
lol....true enough. Some have mechanical aptitude, some mental aptitude....
Doesn't take an electrician to figure out (mostly) what else is on that microwave circuit. Presumably it is plugged into a receptacle. When it's tripped, what else goes down?
He is an Uni Prof...they don't do these types of things...just sayin
I find it hard to believe that there are guys that do not know how to use screw drivers...but they exist.
I'd be interested to see what is causing the draw in that circuit as well. My guess would be another kitchen appliance operating at the same time, otherwise, what is on that draws 600+ watts often enough that breaker tripping bothers you?
At my parents house, the certified electrician connected the outside plugs, washing machine and living room on the same circuit during construction. I have no idea what crack he was smoking that made that a good idea. Labelling breakers is a nightmare and even tracking down what is on each circuit takes a lot of time (or a crap ton of lamps so you can see what outlets are on).
The refrigerator...and another socket plus some random lights. Microwave, kettle and toaster all on same circuit which means not all can be used at the same time. It's weird as the electrics were presumably done at the same time as the kitchen and the microwave shelf is built into the units. The nearest socket is this one that seems connected to bloody everything else.
I also have some outside GFI receptacles that are acting up. I have an outdoor IR heater which works at 400 watts but trips the breaker when on 1500 W max. I unplugged everything on that receptacle and everything that I thought was connected to that circuit, bought a cat 12 extension cable to handle 1875 W but the circuit breaker blows but it doesn't trip the GFI socket it's plugged into. That seems odd to me... I guess the GFI receptacle is toast too?
wow. In my old place, I wired each outlet in my basement kitchen to separate breakers. 2 counter top outlets and fridge outlet took up 5 or 6 breakers. Lights were separate as well.
I also have some outside GFI receptacles that are acting up. I have an outdoor IR heater which works at 400 watts but trips the breaker when on 1500 W max. I unplugged everything on that receptacle and everything that I thought was connected to that circuit, bought a cat 12 extension cable to handle 1875 W but the circuit breaker blows but it doesn't trip the GFI socket it's plugged into. That seems odd to me... I guess the GFI receptacle is toast too?
Also, the conditions that trip a GFI aren't the same as those that trip a (normal) circuit breaker. A normal circuit breaker will trip if the circuit pulls too many amps (e.g. if you run the toaster and the kettle at the same time). A GFI trips if there is too much leakage current to ground (e.g. if your non-waterproof toaster falls into the sink). You can pull too many amps and not have a short to ground, and you can have a short to ground without pulling too many amps! So it's quite possible that the breaker in the panel will trip and the GFI receptacle will still be OK.
Microwave, fridge, kettle, and toaster all on the same circuit is bad and would certainly be over current. The fridge doesn't draw much, but the other appliances are big loads. I think kitchen receptacles are each supposed to have their own breaker (because of this potential problem), could be wrong but that would be the smart way to do it regardless of code.
It sounds like you have a bloody mess on your hands. Wiring like that in an industrial panel is what we call a "rat's nest". Electrical inspection: open panel, "NOPE", close panel and walk away ...
How far away is your panel from the kitchen? How much finished drywall or insulated walls are in the way?
I've been pondering getting a 240V outlet put in my garage but don't want to open a can of worms for some of the reasons mentioned above.
Electrical work can be a pain
You get a 3 part problem , depending on when the house was built, in the 50's a toaster , kettle and hand mixer was as good as it got, 70's you got the microwave, then in the 80's you got everything, pannini presses, slow cookers, processors and electric loads followed. The code is a moving traget that constantly gets revised, some areas have kitchen 'splits', two 15amp circuits feed one recepticle with the brass bridge taken out to seperate the circuits, other areas just do 20amp loads to kitchen recepticles. Small appliances are more efficient than ever, led bulbs and infra heaters.
That said , there are so many houses with Mickey Mouse fixes on circuits, folks take the route of least resistance.
I'd make sure my furnace was stand alone, and any fridge. You dont want the heat or groceries going out because of a load issue. There are simple loads calculations to find out why the porch heater kills the breaker, it can be as simple as too long a run on too small a wire.
There is no substitute for a real electrician, that said a lot of home stuff can be sorted pretty easy.
TThe only concern is some electricians seem to think they can get 240v from a tandem breaker ( ie a regular sized breaker with 2 hot entry points)
That shouldn't be an issue at all provided there is space in the panel and easy access to the garage. The only concern is some electricians seem to think they can get 240v from a tandem breaker ( ie a regular sized breaker with 2 hot entry points) . The tandem only picks up one phase of power from a resi panel. So you turn on both 15amp breakers on the tandem but are really only getting 120v to the 240 outlet lol. I've seen this so many times .
The only time a tandem will give you 208-240 is on a 3phase commercial/industrial supply and you put the tandem between phases.
What?
Sorry WRONGO!
Didn't you say you were an electrician? cuz I don't think you truly understand AC. Go hot to hot in the panel, you better have at least 220v AC in a one phase residential setup.
If you install two circuit breakers on one hot side, you will have 110v, grab the full wave and you have 220v.
Aren't ALL residential panels set up ABABABAB now? by code? so you will always get 220v out of a tandem.