Framton Nuttel
Well-known member
I'm relating a recent experience here, as I am still trying to help a family member advocate for themselves with the contractors involved and also because the situation highlights a number of things that can go wrong with an electrical job. I work on high voltage systems in an industrial setting, but am not an electrician and don't pretend to be one.
The prelude to the saga below is that the family member had a new electric furnace installed and other HVAC work performed. The HVAC contractor was supposed to have their electrician add a second service panel, as well as a second service drop to add sufficient capacity. The homeowner apparently had some questions as to whether the work was fully completed, but the system was more or less functional and the contractor took the money and moved on. This all happened about a year ago and everything seemed to be working ok.
Last week, the family member had a number of circuits stop working in their house. We quickly established that voltage on the L1 leg of their 240V service was much lower than nominal, and all branch circuits on the L1 leg (as well as all 240V circuits) stopped working (everything on L2 was fine). We've have recently had some very stormy weather, so it seemed possible that the existing service drop lines got yanked by blowing branches or that there was water ingress somewhere.
Checking outside, it quickly became apparent that the outdoor work was never completed:
So next day (apparently after calling seven places) they get an electrician to come out and he confirms the L1 leg is bad. He goes outdoor and checks the meter box, and quickly realizes the installation was unfinished. I would have thought he could have pulled the jumper and at least checked for loose lugs or something inside the box, but he didn't want to touch it and (understandably) urged them to get the original contractor to come out and take responsibility.
They called the original contractor, who "promised to call back" but has been basically ghosting them. We are at the start of a two week "construction holiday" here, where pretty much everyone in construction and trades takes their vacation. I am urging them to get whatever electrician they can find to come back on an emergency call and do whatever it takes to at least address the arcing connection in the meter box and get them a stable 240V service until they can get the whole mess cleaned up (maybe take the original contractor to small claims court or whatever).
I will post some photos later, but the whole thing is pretty scary. If anyone has advice or comments I'd be grateful for whatever support.
Thanks!
FN
The prelude to the saga below is that the family member had a new electric furnace installed and other HVAC work performed. The HVAC contractor was supposed to have their electrician add a second service panel, as well as a second service drop to add sufficient capacity. The homeowner apparently had some questions as to whether the work was fully completed, but the system was more or less functional and the contractor took the money and moved on. This all happened about a year ago and everything seemed to be working ok.
Last week, the family member had a number of circuits stop working in their house. We quickly established that voltage on the L1 leg of their 240V service was much lower than nominal, and all branch circuits on the L1 leg (as well as all 240V circuits) stopped working (everything on L2 was fine). We've have recently had some very stormy weather, so it seemed possible that the existing service drop lines got yanked by blowing branches or that there was water ingress somewhere.
Checking outside, it quickly became apparent that the outdoor work was never completed:
- there are two service drop conduits above the meter box, but one of them just has the two wires hanging out not connected to anything
- there is no electric meter in the socket, just a meter jumper
- on the customer side below the meter box, I can see two separate conduits: a rigid PVC conduit that runs to original service panel, plus a second flexible conduit added by the HVAC contractor
- presumably, the two customer side circuits have somehow been wired in parallel inside the meter box using the lugs from the meter socket [edit: it turns out this meter box is designed to support two service panels using an accessory lug]
- tapping on the outside of the glass faceplate covering the meter socket caused visible arcing inside the box and caused the L1 fault to come and go (tapping was done with a 1000V insulated screwdriver fwiw)
So next day (apparently after calling seven places) they get an electrician to come out and he confirms the L1 leg is bad. He goes outdoor and checks the meter box, and quickly realizes the installation was unfinished. I would have thought he could have pulled the jumper and at least checked for loose lugs or something inside the box, but he didn't want to touch it and (understandably) urged them to get the original contractor to come out and take responsibility.
They called the original contractor, who "promised to call back" but has been basically ghosting them. We are at the start of a two week "construction holiday" here, where pretty much everyone in construction and trades takes their vacation. I am urging them to get whatever electrician they can find to come back on an emergency call and do whatever it takes to at least address the arcing connection in the meter box and get them a stable 240V service until they can get the whole mess cleaned up (maybe take the original contractor to small claims court or whatever).
I will post some photos later, but the whole thing is pretty scary. If anyone has advice or comments I'd be grateful for whatever support.
Thanks!
FN
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… definitely make them come back and fix it. Or file claim with their insurance


