Whart posts
I must have missed your statement about pulling extra wires in the same conduit as the feeder, if I understand your statements correctly.
In your first posting of the thread you did not mention a correlation between the "zap" and the compressor cycling off and on. I would agree the contacts that control the compressor motor could indeed cause the pop noise heard through your audio system.
I believe one issue here is the fact the circuit that feeds the compressor motor, via relay contacts, is pulled in the same conduit as the audio sub panel feeder. Current carrying conductors installed in the same raceway, conduct, can interact with one another. A current carrying wire will have a magnetic field around it. Induced voltages, though small, will will cut across to other conductors within the same conduit. Think of it working kind of like a transformer. When the control circuit for the compressor commands the relay contact to close or open a transient voltage spike is sent out on the circuit wires feeding the compressor. Jmo the compressor motor feed should be installed in its own metallic conduit back to the main service electrical panel.
Jim
I had the electrician come back and set up a separate line just for the compressor- having nothing to do with the system wiring or subpanel. (He had already pulled extra wire through the conduit up into the room, so it was no big deal to do this- he installed a high quality receptacle to this extra line, and terminated it at a different subpanel than that which runs the audio system).
(He had already pulled extra wire through the conduit up into the room, so it was no big deal to do this- he installed a high quality receptacle to this extra line,>>
I must have missed your statement about pulling extra wires in the same conduit as the feeder, if I understand your statements correctly.
In your first posting of the thread you did not mention a correlation between the "zap" and the compressor cycling off and on. I would agree the contacts that control the compressor motor could indeed cause the pop noise heard through your audio system.
I believe one issue here is the fact the circuit that feeds the compressor motor, via relay contacts, is pulled in the same conduit as the audio sub panel feeder. Current carrying conductors installed in the same raceway, conduct, can interact with one another. A current carrying wire will have a magnetic field around it. Induced voltages, though small, will will cut across to other conductors within the same conduit. Think of it working kind of like a transformer. When the control circuit for the compressor commands the relay contact to close or open a transient voltage spike is sent out on the circuit wires feeding the compressor. Jmo the compressor motor feed should be installed in its own metallic conduit back to the main service electrical panel.
Jim