600SL
Well-known member
Hello
I have recently purchased a Lincoln Power MIG 210 welder. So far this has only happened twice but it happened on two different 120V circuits not connected to the 240V welding circuit.
My welder is feed by a 110 AMP sub panel off the main 200 AMP panel. I have two separate 120V lines that connect to the main 200 AMP panel. Both of these lines eventually run in the vicinity of the welding sub panel but have nothing to do with it otherwise. The two 120V lines are run through a common conduit. The circuit breakers for the 120V lines are GFIC type.
I have never seen either of these lines trip a breaker until now and both occurrences occurred during welding. At the time One circuit was loaded with 300W DC power supply. The next time it happened the circuit running my computers was tripped.
Is this some kind of rare coincidence or is there something I should look for.
I have recently purchased a Lincoln Power MIG 210 welder. So far this has only happened twice but it happened on two different 120V circuits not connected to the 240V welding circuit.
My welder is feed by a 110 AMP sub panel off the main 200 AMP panel. I have two separate 120V lines that connect to the main 200 AMP panel. Both of these lines eventually run in the vicinity of the welding sub panel but have nothing to do with it otherwise. The two 120V lines are run through a common conduit. The circuit breakers for the 120V lines are GFIC type.
I have never seen either of these lines trip a breaker until now and both occurrences occurred during welding. At the time One circuit was loaded with 300W DC power supply. The next time it happened the circuit running my computers was tripped.
Is this some kind of rare coincidence or is there something I should look for.