akpingel
Well-known member
I have a shop that has a 25 amp subpanel with two 10 amp breakers. One breaker connects the lights and the other to the 5-6 110v outlets in the shop. The shop and subsequent wiring are from somewhere between 1975 and 1990 I guess. I bought the property in Feb this year and had the home inspector go through it along with the house. The inspector used a 3 wire tester to show it was all wired correctly. I have used 3 outlets regularly, but recently one did not work. I used a 3 wire tester and found all sorts of results from the different outlets. Some outlets said no ground, others said hot and neutral flipped. I dont know exactly why this all of the sudden stopped being correct... obviously a problem that I need to understand before I get shocked or burn the shop down. I turned off the breaker and pulled the first outlet in the chain out. I found one of the two grounds not connected at all, and cut too short to have been used at all (outlets daisy chained together). I put in a new outlet and connected both grounds using a jumper. After doing so, the outlet tested correctly, but the next outlet tested as no ground... pulled the outlet off and found the same thing... one ground wire too short to have been ever connected...
I say all of that to ask, why would the outlets not have been intentionally not properly grounded? Any ideas as to what changes in the circuit may have shown it as wired correctly before and now wired incorrectly?
Also, I know that there is a grounding rod and that all of the wires in the sub panel are connected to it... but I will post pictures when I get home from work.
Thanks,
Alex
I say all of that to ask, why would the outlets not have been intentionally not properly grounded? Any ideas as to what changes in the circuit may have shown it as wired correctly before and now wired incorrectly?
Also, I know that there is a grounding rod and that all of the wires in the sub panel are connected to it... but I will post pictures when I get home from work.
Thanks,
Alex