jmillican1983
Well-known member
My shop uses a sub panel fed from a 100a breaker in my main panel in the house. I have a 3 head 36k btu Lennox mini split system in the shop. When the mini split is turned on in the shop, two separate lighting circuits in the house have issues. They're canless LED retrofit lights that screw into the sockets inside each ceiling can. I have these lights on 4 circuits throughout the house, but only two circuits are affected when the shop mini splits are on. The some of the lights on each circuit will exhibit various symptoms ranging from not lighting at all, flickering/strobing, delayed illumination. If I turn the light switch off and back on, sometimes the lights that were having issues start working fine and different lights on the same circuit exhibit the above issues. The problem goes away when the mini split is turned off. I replaced all of the lights on one of the affected lighting circuits (with the same type), without success.
The wiring in the main panel for these affected lighting circuits (coming off the breaker) is near the wiring for the shop sub panel (4ga copper). Is it possible that there is some EMI being emitted by the Mini split, affecting the frequency of the voltage in the lighting circuits and upsetting the led drivers?
I tried a regular LED bulb in place of one of the canless led lights just to see how it would work and there were no issues. I tested the canless lights on a different circuit by screwing them into my bathroom vanity light. no problems there. I did check the voltage at a few different light sockets on the affected circuits and I have 121 volts between hot and neutral. I also checked to make sure each of the hot wires coming into my main panel had the same voltage and they do. 122v each. I checked the torque of the screw on each breaker and all the neutral screws. I inspected each light switch for loose screws and loose neutral wires at the wire nuts in the junction boxes. No problems were found.
Is it possible that the mini split is creating interference and affecting those lighting circuits due to the proximity of the wiring in my main panel? If so, what would be the best way to correct that?
The wiring in the main panel for these affected lighting circuits (coming off the breaker) is near the wiring for the shop sub panel (4ga copper). Is it possible that there is some EMI being emitted by the Mini split, affecting the frequency of the voltage in the lighting circuits and upsetting the led drivers?
I tried a regular LED bulb in place of one of the canless led lights just to see how it would work and there were no issues. I tested the canless lights on a different circuit by screwing them into my bathroom vanity light. no problems there. I did check the voltage at a few different light sockets on the affected circuits and I have 121 volts between hot and neutral. I also checked to make sure each of the hot wires coming into my main panel had the same voltage and they do. 122v each. I checked the torque of the screw on each breaker and all the neutral screws. I inspected each light switch for loose screws and loose neutral wires at the wire nuts in the junction boxes. No problems were found.
Is it possible that the mini split is creating interference and affecting those lighting circuits due to the proximity of the wiring in my main panel? If so, what would be the best way to correct that?