almarg8,581 posts01-15-2019 6:12pmIf Al is still following this thread I am sure he will have a better technical answer.
Not necessarily, Jim :-)
Your finding that having the hairdryer plugged into the outlet where the measurement was taken resulted in a DC offset of around 730 mv, while measuring at the same outlet but with the hairdryer plugged into various other circuit branches on the same leg resulted in around 115 mv, is indeed a bit of a headscratcher.
Al,
Ah, that’s nothing....
In another room there are also several 120V convenience wall outlets that are fed with a 20 amp separate circuit. Wire is #12-2 with ground Romex. Home run feed to first outlet, closet to electrical panel. Branch circuit Romex is run around the perimeter of the room to outlet boxes in an in and out configuration. Up and down, and all around. The length of the Romex from the first outlet to the elecrical panel is approx 45ft.
The length of the Romex from the first outlet to the farthest, last, outlet in the room is approx 50ft. Approx 90ft total from the last outlet to the electrical panel.
The test.
I first plugged the hair dryer into the farthest duplex receptacle outlet. (High heat, low blower speed).
Mains voltage unloaded, 120.8Vac.
Hair dryer on, loaded, 115.8Vac.
5Vac VD.
Plugged in the low pass filter in the same duplex outlet.
Fluke measured 1.577Vdc . . ??? Higher than my previous post test of 0.734Vdc. What are the differences between the two branch circuits? Length of the branch circuit wire and the AWG wire gauge size. (0.734Vdc 75ft, 10-2. Mains loaded VD approx 2.5Vac) (1.577Vdc 90ft 12-2. Mains loaded VD 5Vac)
I then plugged the Low pass filter into the first outlet. (Outlet closest to electrical panel. First outlet on home run feed.)
Hair dryer left in farthest outlet.
Fluke measured 0.578Vdc....... (Note DC offset is decreasing)
I then plugged the low pass filter in the outlet just below the electrical panel. (Basically connecting the low pass filter to the electrical panel itself. The branch circuit source)
Turned on the hair dryer. (High heat, low blower speed).
Fluke measured 0.106Vdc (106.3mVdc) meter then set to mV.
Note the harmonics, DC offset, decays the closer its gets to the source the electrical panel. Or does the source have anything to do with it?
Final test.
I plugged the hair dryer into the outlet directly below the electrical panel. Plugged the low pass filter into the first outlet closest to the electrical panel.
Fluke measured 0.115Vdc, it then settled down to 0.114Vdc
I then plugged the filter into the farthest outlet on the branch circuit.
The Fluke measured 0.115Vdc. Same thing here it settled down to 0.114Vdc
Both measurements were taken without a connected load on the branch circuit.
For a load I plugged in a quartz construction work light in the farthest outlet. I think it’s a 500 watt but can’t remember for sure. I’d have to check it.
I then measured the DC offset again. This time it measured 0.112Vdc.
Jim
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