How to tell if your AC wiring needs an upgrade


Just posted a new blog article on how to analyze your AC wiring using a very inexpensive meter.  Who knows, if you find a problem with your wiring it may just save your home!

 

 

erik_squires

False...

The ground rod outside has nothing to do with it.

I false your false and raise you a "rude" to go with it.  You missed my point.

erik_squires,

Thank you for that fine explanation. I was just curious because the ad of this device showed that N-E reading as 02. Should that read 02 or 2?

So, then I am wondering what steps are needed to get it back to zero? I have 3 dedicated lines each with 10 gauge wiring, I re-read the ad and I am still a bit confused.

BTW, I ordered one to try out. I will try it first as per instructions to establish a baseline, but I would also like to try it into my Audioquest Niagara 7000.

ozzy

@Ozzy This isn’t a lab grade device and may over estimate by 1-2 volts, but it is relatively accurate. A well wired home can have a couple of volts on the neutral and all is pretty much normal. It happens because you wire homes for safety and cost effectiveness and 2V is just fine.

You want to make sure your home isn’t much higher than that though, AND if you want to know if your audio system is causing your AC to sag (drop in voltage) this is a good way to measure it.

It is rare, but dangerous, that a home’s neutral becomes corroded or fails, in which case that N-E voltage will suddenly rise, and that’s why it’s a good thing to have an eye on now and then. Also, the testing I suggest helps you measure where the problem is. Putting in a new branch circuit is not going to help you if you already have an elevated neutral. Fix that first!

It may help to understand things this way:  The higher the neutral voltage the lower your outlet voltage (assuming you don't have something else wildly wrong).

Thinking about this some more, I'd say the most common error you'll find is an outlet with the hot and neutral reversed.  In that case the n-e will show 118 V or so.  Easy to fix.

The higher the neutral voltage the lower your outlet voltage (assuming you don't have something else wildly wrong).

 

Can you explain this above?

I did the test with a multimeter on kitchen outlets with nothing connected. I measured 0.9V. I plugged in a 25W incandescent lamp and the voltage dropped to 0.4. Was the 0.9 noise?