My daughter and son-in-law (young couple) bought a decent starter home (except the electrical).
This has to rate as some of the worst electrical to pass home inspection. The subpanel had lots of 14 ga. wire on 20A breakers. Lots of wires packed through a hole made for a 3/4 fitting w/ no fitting (i.e. wire crammed against sharp metal opening).
The main opening has the terminal adapter backward with no nut on it.
The range wire was only rated for 40A, on a 50A breaker.
The wire for the sub only uses 3 wires and the wire is only rated at 75A on a 100A breaker.
Several neutrals were double tapped.
I don't think the inspector even realized the house had a sub, because it was behind a door. But I would think the lack of branch circuits in the main 200A panel, and a 100A branch circuit in the main, would have been a clue the house had a sub.
What is really sad is that when they first moved in the house, my daughter called me and told me the brand new dryer they bought for the house didn't work. My son-in-law had a volt meter, and through long distance diagnosis, I was able to tell them both leads of the 240v dryer outlet were wired on the same leg (This passed home inspection too.)
They called the home warranty outfit, who sent someone out to fix the dryer circuit (in the sub) but he didn't tell them about all the other dangerous issues. The home warranty (the seller bought the policy) charged them $150 to fix the one electrical problem. The exclusion says they don't cover code issues. But again he didn't mention any other issues.
My son-in-law/daughter are several states away, so I've only been to see them once, in their new house. My time was limited, so I couldn't fix everything. I just wanted to get the electrical safe enough so that their house wouldn't immediately burn down. Replaced all the overfused breakers with correct ones, except the breaker to the sub. Couldn't find a 70A double pole breaker locally.
I tested the current draw on the sub when they had everything on (range had all burners and oven on) and the sub was drawing below 70A, so I left the 100A breaker for now.
I didn't want to dig into the sheet rock to properly fix all the wires coming through the 3/4" naked hole, but I was able to split the romex cables up and send them through other knockouts, so they aren't so bunched up. I followed the same crappy pattern in the box of sticking the terminal adapters upside down through the holes with no nuts on the backside, just as something to keep the cables from touching the sharp metal in the knockouts.
Separated double tapped neutrals.
My time ran out, so I had to leave the rest. Here are the before pics. I didn't take any "after" pics, nothing to be proud of there.
This should be a training example in how not to do Home Inspections.
This has to rate as some of the worst electrical to pass home inspection. The subpanel had lots of 14 ga. wire on 20A breakers. Lots of wires packed through a hole made for a 3/4 fitting w/ no fitting (i.e. wire crammed against sharp metal opening).
The main opening has the terminal adapter backward with no nut on it.
The range wire was only rated for 40A, on a 50A breaker.
The wire for the sub only uses 3 wires and the wire is only rated at 75A on a 100A breaker.
Several neutrals were double tapped.
I don't think the inspector even realized the house had a sub, because it was behind a door. But I would think the lack of branch circuits in the main 200A panel, and a 100A branch circuit in the main, would have been a clue the house had a sub.
What is really sad is that when they first moved in the house, my daughter called me and told me the brand new dryer they bought for the house didn't work. My son-in-law had a volt meter, and through long distance diagnosis, I was able to tell them both leads of the 240v dryer outlet were wired on the same leg (This passed home inspection too.)
They called the home warranty outfit, who sent someone out to fix the dryer circuit (in the sub) but he didn't tell them about all the other dangerous issues. The home warranty (the seller bought the policy) charged them $150 to fix the one electrical problem. The exclusion says they don't cover code issues. But again he didn't mention any other issues.
My son-in-law/daughter are several states away, so I've only been to see them once, in their new house. My time was limited, so I couldn't fix everything. I just wanted to get the electrical safe enough so that their house wouldn't immediately burn down. Replaced all the overfused breakers with correct ones, except the breaker to the sub. Couldn't find a 70A double pole breaker locally.
I tested the current draw on the sub when they had everything on (range had all burners and oven on) and the sub was drawing below 70A, so I left the 100A breaker for now.
I didn't want to dig into the sheet rock to properly fix all the wires coming through the 3/4" naked hole, but I was able to split the romex cables up and send them through other knockouts, so they aren't so bunched up. I followed the same crappy pattern in the box of sticking the terminal adapters upside down through the holes with no nuts on the backside, just as something to keep the cables from touching the sharp metal in the knockouts.
Separated double tapped neutrals.
My time ran out, so I had to leave the rest. Here are the before pics. I didn't take any "after" pics, nothing to be proud of there.
This should be a training example in how not to do Home Inspections.


