The Dangers of Shared Neutrals: How To Avoid Being Shocked

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 27 ноя 2022
  • Join this channel to get access to perks:
    / @electricianu
    In today’s age of electrical work, shared neutrals are relatively rare. Most of us run an independent neutral with our phase conductors. But can you receive an electrical shock from a shared neutral even if the breaker is in the off position? In the latest episode of Electrician U, Dustin explores this topic to bring some light to the subject.
    🤘⚡️MEMBERSHIP⚡️🤘
    JOIN ELECTRICIAN U - become a member and get:
    FREE Continuing Education every year
    FREE Practice Exams
    FREE Monthly Video Courses
    FREE Weekly Live Instructor-Led Classes
    FREE Monthly Educational Newsletter
    Premium Members-Only Content
    Private Discord Channel
    Monthly Members-Only Discord Chats
    Sign up here --- www.electricianu.com/electric...
    🎧🎹MUSIC AND VIDEO:🎹🎧
    / descantmv
    🎬✍️ART AND ILLUSTRATION:✍️🎬
    www.daverussoart.com
    As discussed in previous videos, electricity travels in loops to function. On a single pole circuit (120v for example) the flow typically leaves out on the hot wire, goes thru the load, and returns to source (usually a breaker) on the neutral conductor. In addition, in most current residential work, a single dedicated cable, comprised of one hot, one neutral, and one grounding conductor, is run for each separate circuit. So, when you shut the breaker off, there isn’t a chance to receive a shock on that circuit (on the load side of the breaker anyhow) since the loop is broken.
    However, in past years, shared neutrals were fairly common. A shared neutral is where you have multiple hot conductors sharing the same neutral. This was done to save wires and therefore save money. However, there are dangers present when using shared neutrals. That being, even if you turn off the breaker for the circuit you are physically going to perform work on, that neutral conductor can still have current flowing on it from the other circuit. To combat this issue the NEC now requires us to install a multipole breaker (or place handle ties on the single pole breakers of a multipole shared neutral circuit) so you are made to shut off ALL the breakers involved with a shared neutral circuit. But this provision is a fairly recent change (within the past 15 years or so) and you can still find single pole breakers for a shared neutral circuit all throughout the country.
    There are a few scenarios where you could receive a shock on the neutral conductor of a shared neutral circuit. If you left the breaker on but took apart the joint on the neutral drop in the box and touched the white wire headed to the panel and either of the other 2 white wires headed to the actual device, you will just be completing the loop itself! Another way to get an even worse shock would be to leave the breaker on, take apart the neutral joint, and then touch the 2 white wires headed to the devices themselves. By doing this, you are basically completing a 240v loop and will get a wicked shock!
    The easiest way to avoid all of this would be to simply turn the circuit off that you are working on. And if you are working on an older shared neutral circuit with single pole breakers, then shut them both off! This eliminates the chance of having any voltage on the neutral. Another prudent thing to do is to test if with your meter. Test your meter on a known live circuit first, then test the circuit you are attempting to work on, then retest again on the live circuit to prove that your meter is operating properly. Another thing to consider regarding receptacles. The loop is NOT complete, so current CANNOT flow, until something is plugged in somewhere in that circuit. The loop is open at the device itself. Lighting on the other hand, is connected via the lightbulb itself (or the filament within the light bulb) so current will flow as soon as you turn the breaker and the switch on! Another thing to consider, is that current does NOT care about the color of the wire! So just because you are touching a white wire, doesn’t mean you won’t get shocked if you are doing something you shouldn’t be doing with it!! Always get your journeyman’s tips or advice before attempting to work on a circuit until you fully understand the exact scenario you are up against.
    We hope this has been helpful in understanding a bit how one could get shocked by touching the shared neutral conductor even if the breaker is off. Is there a topic you would like to see discussed on Electrician U? Leave a comment in the comments section and let us know. Please continue to follow Dustin and Electrician U as we are constantly updating our content to assist our followers in becoming the best electricians that they can be
    #electrician #electrical #electricity #dangers #shared #neutral #shocked

Комментарии • 598

  • @davidwoodard1820
    @davidwoodard1820 Год назад +124

    Great video! Your statement that will stick with me from this day forward is "Electricity doesn't care about the color of wires".

    • @bernsfindsandmore7636
      @bernsfindsandmore7636 11 месяцев назад +6

      Works for me as well... if only life was this way as well...

  • @binkleyt
    @binkleyt Год назад +71

    Love that whiteboard addition to the videos -- super helpful to see things visualized like that with the fast changes (less clunky than a real whiteboard..writing, erasing, etc...)

    • @tochia
      @tochia Год назад

      🤔🤔🤔🤔

    • @ClutchTFS
      @ClutchTFS Год назад +1

      They're called smartboards I had them in elementary and highschool pretty sweet!

    • @sotjonbixho3272
      @sotjonbixho3272 5 месяцев назад

      😮😮😮

  • @johnsaake2303
    @johnsaake2303 Год назад +16

    one thing I was taught when taking apart joints is to break the hots, neutrals, then the grounds; and the opposite order when putting joints together. That and keep your boots on the ground and your idle hands off of metal boxes cans or cabinets. Both are good habits to form alongside not working energized whenever possible

  • @jasonirion6664
    @jasonirion6664 Год назад +51

    You can melt that neutral wire like a candle if both positive wires are landed on the same phase. If they are loaded up double the amount of current is returning back on that neutral. The breakers won’t trip but that neutral will fail spectacularly. Maybe a video should be done on this because it is easy to make this mistake. Keep up the great work !!

    • @docferringer
      @docferringer Год назад +3

      He's got that nice "teaching wall" that has demo outlets and panels, so he could use that. I say New Years is a great time to light that firecracker!

    • @lloydmills9619
      @lloydmills9619 Год назад +8

      Positives huh.

    • @freddybee4029
      @freddybee4029 Год назад +4

      @jasoniron6664, I think you need to stop watching youtube video’s, and go to a proper schooling, to learn the difference between ALTERNATING & DIRECT CURRENT applications.

    • @ReeceMayer
      @ReeceMayer Год назад +8

      Hot, not positive.
      Also, it's actually difficult to make that mistake because a 2 pole breaker connects to adjacent bus bar tabs that alternate phases. So unless you go against code and use 2 separate nonlinked breakers and install them with a gap in between them or an odd number gap in between them and land on the same phase, this problem wouldn't happen.

    • @mikejohnston179
      @mikejohnston179 Год назад +4

      ​@@ReeceMayer Enter home owner re-arranging the breakers in the panel, so they are in a more logical order. "Why are these two kitchen breakers linked together? That's dumb. I think the breaker for the microwave belongs between these two."

  • @drband8181
    @drband8181 6 месяцев назад +4

    Great explanation. I came searching for why I got a shock from a neutral when the breaker for the circuit was off while installing a LED power supply in place of a light fixture. It was a shared neutral situation I found out here! Something new to watch for. Thanks for the info!

  • @danhardhat2
    @danhardhat2 Год назад +33

    Single pole breakers are allowed on exterior lighting circuits with a shared neutral [NEC 225.7(B)]. NEC recognizes the voltage drop benefits of sharing the neutral because typically long distances are involved with exterior lighting and they recognize the liability of loosing multiple exterior lighting circuits from a single short if multipole breakers were required. So, extra heads up when working on parking lots and street lighting.

    • @barryomahony4983
      @barryomahony4983 Год назад +3

      225.7(B) doesn't say anything about breakers, but it does call the multiple ungrounded conductors a "circuit" (singular), as in a multiwire branch circuit. 225.7(A) says outdoor lighting circuits shall comply with 210; including the handle tie requirement for MWBCs. Something of a moot point now since 226.7 has been deleted in the 2023 NEC; it was an unnecessary section IMO. But yes an extra heads up when working in those locations; a common danger is the lack of EGC.

    • @danhardhat2
      @danhardhat2 Год назад +4

      @@barryomahony4983 You're right...2023 NEC has deleted the exception that permitted the shared neutral for exterior lighting. There are many municipal lighting systems that use the shared neutral...It allows street lights and the seasonal lighting receptacles on the poles to run at 120V, and have each pole stagger circuits so if there is a fault, only half the lights would go out, which is much less dangerous for drivers and pedestrians. Now without the shared neutral, the conductors will go from #6's to #2's and have to run an extra neutral. And there will be current on all the neutrals, wasting energy (about 1.5% wasted energy - not much but still less efficient). I disagree with the NFPA - there are many good reasons for that exception for exterior lighting in the code.

    • @alhawkins3376
      @alhawkins3376 Год назад

      Its not just exterior lighting but where you have sensitive equip. like a lab, just removing the neutral could fry whats on those circuits, even cutting circuits off not together can also do it.

    • @professorg8383
      @professorg8383 10 месяцев назад

      @@danhardhat2 Well, I'll have to reread this but I didn't think it prohibited these shared neutral circuits. These are completely safe circuits and quite useful and practical for long runs. Not very common in regular residential wiring. These used to be quite common in long agricultural buildings and shops. As you point out, there are applications of this that make a lot of sense.
      I tend to look at it this way, what properly trained electricians would think it OK to spilt a two pole breaker into single pole circuits??? I can kinda see a DIY homeowner not understanding, but then I have long advised against electrical work as a DIY skill. I blame the internet for convincing people that they know what they are doing, when they clearly don't. What makes it even worse is all the stuff posted from 240 volt countries like "this is how it works everywhere in the world"!!!! It just confuses the hell out of DIYers. wh really should not be doing this work in the first place!!
      Does anyone in their right mind consider DIY surgery?? IDK, but I'm guessing that most people realize that the consequences of not completely understanding or doing something wrong, might be fatal. But working on electrical without fully knowing what you are doing, can have the same kind of fatal consequences.

  • @alfredsalas6381
    @alfredsalas6381 Год назад +16

    Great thing for me to learn about ,we just did a panel upgrade for a customer and the inspector wanted me to “handle tie” all ckt breakers that share a neutral and zip tie the neutral wires together to ID them

    • @alphasaiyan5760
      @alphasaiyan5760 Год назад +1

      Exactly. Breaker handle ties 👍

    • @trebochet
      @trebochet 3 месяца назад +1

      Yes Multi wire branch circuits , and don't zip tie them. Tape them at the panel all together with an identifying tape color if you have several similar circuits , make your inspector happy 😊

  • @raymondsciara
    @raymondsciara 3 месяца назад +3

    Awesome video. I want to take this opportunitty to say thank you Dustin for this great content in your channel. I passed my Journeyman test in August 2023. I would not have done it without your videos and all the help I got along the way from knowledgeable electricians that went out of their way to make sure I understood theory and field practices. I want to learn more stuff. I am currently working at an industrial work area. I am still a bit intimidated by the environment, but the experience I am gaining keeps me motivated. I have learned that failure is apart of the learning experience. I will never let past and future failures keep me from trying my best as an electrician.

  • @kkalafus
    @kkalafus Год назад +19

    The most basic question that I wish the video spoke to is, how do you know if there's a shared neutral? Inside my panel I saw red wires used for 120 v circuits. That caused me to trace where the wire was going, which was Romex that also had a black conductor from another circuit. I hadn't seen this before and ended up learning more about it on your channel. IMO it's crazy that shared neutral circuits are allowed in residential construction because over the life of a home, someone can easily rearrange things in the panel in a way that's unsafe. In one of my circuits, someone had put the red and black wires on the same phase and ended up with double current on the neutral, which was a fire hazard and had to be fixed. Our home inspection missed this issue.

    • @danielherman9483
      @danielherman9483 Год назад +2

      Not an electrician, so take this answer with a grain of salt, but the only way to somewhat know for sure is to open the panel and trace the wire for the circuit that you're working on to see if it's something like a 14/3 or 12/3 (and then double check that they're on different phases like they should be). Even then, you have no guarantees that someone didn't do something insane like tie neutrals together from different circuits if there are multiple circuits in a junction box. If you didn't wire it yourself (meaning you're not 100% positive how everything is wired), just take the 30 seconds to put your meter on each wire to see if there's voltage.
      Btw just because the wire is red doesn't necessarily mean anything at all - 14/2/2 or 12/2/2 is a thing, so a single piece of romex could have enough conductors in it for 2 full circuits with no shared neutrals, but there may still be a red wire present there.

    • @JPLaJeunesse
      @JPLaJeunesse Год назад

      Usually 2/2 wires they indicate with a red mark on the neutral with the red and black mark on the neutral with black

    • @weavercattlecompany
      @weavercattlecompany Год назад +6

      I've got a degree in electrical engineering so maybe I can help.
      You won't know! Also, it's not going to be an issue unless you mess with the point where the neutrals are tied together or in the circuit breaker panel if the other breaker is still on!
      Best advice from someone who have 30 years experience, just turn the entire circuit breaker panel off if your not sure about how things are wired. You could also use a tone generator to see if the neutrals are shared.
      Fluke Pro Probe 3000 toner, there are videos on RUclips how to use this tool 😉

    • @krakenwoodfloorservicemcma5975
      @krakenwoodfloorservicemcma5975 Год назад +5

      Home inspectors aren’t usually electrical professionals. It’s not their job to get in to the nitty gritty of the panel.

  • @jimlangley840
    @jimlangley840 5 месяцев назад +2

    I know of a journeyman that became the neutral on a 277 volt lighting circuit, it knocked him off a 12 ft. ladder and fried his brain.

  • @phildegruy9295
    @phildegruy9295 Год назад +4

    Super good video. It is good to instruct the helpers/apprentices to be very careful in old houses and make it a requirement to turn everything off at the main before working on any circuit where the neutrals will be broken apart. One for safety and two to keep from blowing random things in the house up from open neutrals. Bought an older house and discovered that every single 120v circuit in the house were ran in a loop of conduit (from and back to panel) with a junction box every 10'. The circuits had 4 neutrals total from the panel and every neutral was half ass twisted together as no wirenut would fit with a piece of tape for cover at every junction box. Honestly don't know why the house had not burned down.

  • @thebluebellschoolofdance932
    @thebluebellschoolofdance932 Год назад +3

    First off, thanks dustin for making these videos. Extremely helpful. In addition to what you explained, it should be noted that a multi branch circuit(shared neutral) should be on separate phases. Never coming from the same phase! Keep on spreading the good word my fellow sparky.

  • @FeguerFineArt
    @FeguerFineArt Год назад +1

    Love your videos! I have been a draftsman (drawing) all my life, not by profession, but a drive. I love drawing day. I always work stuff out by drawing. The way you explain things and visually show it is Awsome. I have had so many AH.HA moments this way. Thank you so much, keep rocking it! God Bless.

  • @JPLaJeunesse
    @JPLaJeunesse Год назад +1

    I appreciate this video so much, with how we do wiring currently most apprentices never learn how or why this was done. In my area there was a housing boom when the wiring was like this and I encounter it frequently and use the opportunity to teach it but now we have a great illustrated video!

  • @sirrussam6647
    @sirrussam6647 Год назад

    Genius. Clear and concise description. You’re and excellent teacher.

  • @Ephesians-ts8ze
    @Ephesians-ts8ze Год назад +8

    I went to work for the state (TX) recently and it’s pretty common for the electrical contractors to share neutrals on new installations. I’m a maintenance electrician and I’m getting pretty frustrated with the crap they leave behind for us to deal with. There’s shared neutrals everywhere and an “anything goes” color code. In Austin it’s red, black, blue for low voltage and brown, yellow, purple for high voltage. But within Austin’s jurisdiction State jobs are not subject to AHJ. So some contractors do it by Austin code and others do it by everywhere else color code.

    • @workingshlub8861
      @workingshlub8861 Год назад +1

      up here in new england i see this all the time with older homes....nothing is ever labeled in the panel of course..

    • @dracula3811
      @dracula3811 Год назад +1

      The shared neutrals on new installations being allowed is on the inspector for passing it. It isn't code.

  • @justaresiguy6197
    @justaresiguy6197 Год назад

    I always wondered why, when doing panel swaps, we had to put three wire homeruns on a 2P breaker… that makes a lot of sense now!! Thanks man!

  • @-_.._._--_.-.-_-_-_-...-.-
    @-_.._._--_.-.-_-_-_-...-.- 5 месяцев назад

    What an awesome dude! Passing out life saving information like it ain't no thing! Respect for that! And in a concise and captivating manner. Thank you!
    Job. Well. Done!

  • @christobaldaetz6062
    @christobaldaetz6062 Год назад +3

    Back when I first started as an electrician, we ran a 12/3 for two circuits. But in the panel, we installed a two pole breaker. So that when you had to work on that circuit, you could do it safely. Now they make 12/2/2 makes it easier to deal with.

  • @jerrybennett9198
    @jerrybennett9198 Год назад +9

    One other thing happened when I was having my business rewired in an old 1937 commercial building with one, two or three businesses being housed in it over the life of the building. The electrical panels and wiring had been changed and upgraded (sometimes by amateurs) several times. The landlord had a supposed electrician come in and change the timer for the signs from one business in the building to another but the conduit to the sign was still in the first business location. The pseudo electrician took his power from the other business main panel but somehow left the connection of the neutral on the first business main panel, so there was a hot wire from one panel and the white wire from another main panel. So my commercial electrician who was installing whole new panel for my business shut all power off to my panel at meter. As he was pulling the main leads the hair went up on his arm near the neutral and he stopped immediately. The back feed was quite significant. Traced it to that old timer box. I think it was a once in his 15 year experience happening. Still when all power to the business is shut off and supposedly we all had our own meters, and main panels, i can see the mistake would be easier. But you have said always check for current even in a dead box. Jerry. PS Love your channel. Have watched most of your videos

  • @Bobcat1950
    @Bobcat1950 8 месяцев назад +8

    Several years ago I built a post and beam garage. I intended on doing a little woodworking and other projects. I was very busy and couldn’t find the time to wire it myself. I hired a seasoned electrician with a great reputation. I had already set the sub panel and pulled the cables. I explained that I wanted 3/4” conduit with metal boxes and GFCI receptacle on each circuit. I came home and found that he used 1/2” conduit and shared the commons and grounds and had not installed the GFCIs. I called him and he said, “The GFCIs were not necessary and that he was able to pull all the wires through the 1/2” conduit. I paid him and a few weeks later installed the GFCIs which wouldn’t work. After asking an electrical engineer, I found out that a GFCI meters between the neutral and the hot wires not the hot and ground. They shouldn’t be wired using a shared neutral.

    • @Goldern
      @Goldern 7 месяцев назад +3

      GFCI calculates the energy going in (hot) and going out (neutral), if the difference between hot and neutral is big (someone turned into Earth and got zapped) then it will automatically trip itself preventing further damage. It does not care at all if Neutral is shared or not, but bear in mind that after Neutral and Hot exits the GFCI, you can’t connect equipments before the GFCI Neutral and after GFCI Hot or there will be imbalance and it will trip. The simple fix is to put a neutral bar connector after/before the GFCI, that way if you need to put an outside circuit that won’t be affected by the GFCI (like a light circuit, to easily find the GFCI after it trips and then reset it), then you’ll be able to wire the light breaker before the GFCI and finish it with the Neutral before the GFCI.

  • @howlongcanimakethisfukingthing
    @howlongcanimakethisfukingthing Год назад +7

    Gotta love multiwire-branch circuits in old 3 phase building.

    • @NathanEnos2005
      @NathanEnos2005 Год назад

      Oh yeah! With breakers that aren't right next to each other. We just hope they're on separate phases... And don't even get me started on junction boxes with not only multiple circuits, but from multiple panels that are halfway across the building from one another. Got my exercise that day!😑

  • @R900DZ
    @R900DZ Год назад

    Fantastic coverage of this topic, thanks!

  • @fernandofrancisco3106
    @fernandofrancisco3106 Год назад

    Thanks for great info. Always appreciate your advice.

  • @AaronSchmid1
    @AaronSchmid1 Год назад +4

    We installed multi-wire branch circuits on the west coast well into the 2000's. Once arc faults started being required in more areas is when we moved away from it.
    So expect to see it in houses up to 2008+.

  • @elc2k385
    @elc2k385 Год назад

    Dustin's videos are always exciting to watch.

  • @csimet
    @csimet Год назад +4

    Great explanation, as usual!
    I ran a new 2-pole 20A breaker with 12/3 dedicated line for my shop table saw, splitting the duplex 5-20R receptacle into 2x 120V 20A with the shared neutral. It is so I can upgrade it down the road to a 220V 20A simplex 6-20R receptacle when I upgrade my table saw from 120V to 220V. In the mean time, it provides the saw's 120V and an extra outlet for some lights until then. The key thing is it all ties back to that 2-pole breaker so both "legs" are shut off and never just the one. Hopefully this meets code... chime in if not please!

    • @web1ece
      @web1ece 4 месяца назад

      I'm planning on doing this in my shop as well... I'm not sure why if it was on a double pole breaker that it would be a problem

  • @anthonymwangi1661
    @anthonymwangi1661 Год назад

    You are awesome man. Keep up doing what you do. Always feel appreciated. From Kenya.

  • @CBrown07696
    @CBrown07696 8 месяцев назад

    I saw this on one of your best of videos and it was eye opening! Not allowed where I live but I see them in places I do work. Never considered overload of the neutral if both power wires are on the same bus.

  • @yeroca
    @yeroca Год назад

    Super clear explanation! Thanks!

  • @elliotsimpson3591
    @elliotsimpson3591 Год назад

    Awesome video! I'm relatively new to the channel, so it's awesome seeing this, as I hadn't ever thought about something like this happening, let alone know that any older house wiring would share a neutral. Does reinforce the importance if sticking a non contact voltage tester around all wiring to be worked on before toughing, though!

  • @drewwassel3367
    @drewwassel3367 Год назад +6

    One potential way you can get shocked from a neutral is if the breaker is off but there is a device with a large capacitor connected then it could energize the circuit

    • @tnspnk3
      @tnspnk3 5 месяцев назад +1

      Lol. I shouldn't laugh, but somehow it just seems funny. Capacitor's 101: Q: How to discharge when the neutral is cut. A: Insert random electrician for path to ground. :)

  • @didriksoderstrom9891
    @didriksoderstrom9891 8 месяцев назад +1

    Working on an old house with shared neutrals (and buried boxes) right now and it’s driving me bonkers. Thank you for the reminder to make sure I’m being safe with this stuff. Old greenfield cable is always waiting to bite you at every turn.

  • @Sparky-ww5re
    @Sparky-ww5re Год назад +4

    Not only have I gotten bitten by a neutral, when I was a teenager I got shocked off an electric water heater. Changing out an element. Uncle Gary turns off the breaker and tells me it's off. Of course I verified the power was off with a multimeter that I tested on a known live circuit. I tested across the terminals on the upper thermostat, but didn't think to check each leg to ground. What happened was there were two single pole 30s in the panel which has been there since probably the 50s or 60s. If memory serves me right the two 30 amp breakers were not even near each other, just randomly placed. Talk about some shady work.

  • @elcabronsontres
    @elcabronsontres 3 месяца назад +1

    I know this is late brother but I know of a fellow electrician that past because of this very situation. South east texas last year. Please be careful out there brothers.

  • @shinshooklive
    @shinshooklive Год назад

    Really nice explanation as always Dustin 🤠

  • @KameraShy
    @KameraShy Год назад +6

    Glad to see this issue is being addressed. I am in a 30's house where wiring is all in conduit. Everywhere they could, shared neutrals were used. When I added some circuits years ago, I just assumed this was standard practice, followed it and did not fix them. But somehow it just did not feel right. This was long before the days of the internet, RUclips and all the learning resources now available. I did go back and check the circuits. I actually made and kept detailed diagrams of the wiring because of how they mushed so many wires together in a single conduit run. They all seem to be on different phases. If I ever need to do more, I will run separate neutrals.

    • @zlcoolboy
      @zlcoolboy Год назад +2

      I guess at least there was conduit. it was probably considered to be an excellent installation when it was done lol.

    • @alexknight7191
      @alexknight7191 Год назад

      I'm assuming it's BX flexible conduit. My and my parents' house (in different cities but both in the northeast) are from the '20s and both have that. Agree if everything is on opposing phases it should be totally fine from a load perspective, but that old BX should be replaced eventually.

  • @AnitaBonita46
    @AnitaBonita46 11 месяцев назад +2

    A one-bedroom apartment was divided and converted into two studio units. I am unit A and my neighbor is unit B. We both have been living in the property for 4 years. A couple of months ago unit B has been having trouble with his outlets. Which affects my bathroom lights. Landlord refuses to fix the problem. And Unit B refuses to get extension cords and fix the problem as well. I am being forced to either give unit B a key to my unit in case I'm not home to access the circuit breaker. Or landlord threatened to evict both of us, if we don't work together in regards to this issue 🤷

  • @cwalton56
    @cwalton56 3 месяца назад +1

    40 years ago, the Contractor I worked for used lots of Edison circuits in new homes we wired. Another electrician I worked with told me of this very situation where he got shocked touching a neutral wire.

  • @kls2020
    @kls2020 6 месяцев назад +1

    When you're dealing with wiring of questionable installation quality something I started doing was to use a clamp on current ammeter or current probe whenever I came across commoned up neutral wires (such as multiple white wires in a wire nut) to solve the mystery . Before removing the wire nut and separating these mystery neutrals check each wire with the clamp on ammeter for presence or absence of current . If there is different current reads on each neutral wire you can compare the load current going out from each breaker and when you have a match mark the neutral wire with that breaker number then turn off the load breaker and verify both line and neutral reads go to zero amps . If two circuits both read the same current value add more load to one circuit to make them easy to distinguish between the two circuits.

  • @thoughtsofanoldSoldier
    @thoughtsofanoldSoldier Год назад +1

    Great information and tips!!!

  • @barryomahony4983
    @barryomahony4983 Год назад +5

    3:26 You could still get a mild shock from the upper white conductor if you touch it while grounded; a small portion of the return current will flow through you.

    • @tnspnk3
      @tnspnk3 5 месяцев назад

      Good point. But I'd say "could" not "will." While many things are fairly straight-forward, this would be complicated. Depends on a lot of factors, like how "grounded" are you and possibly where you are along the circuit path. Not to minimize the danger; I sure as hell wouldn't touch it.

    • @HoosierRallyMaster
      @HoosierRallyMaster 4 месяца назад

      Absolutely! If your body is providing the path to ground, then that "stub" white will all-of-a-sudden have current in it.

  • @w1swh1
    @w1swh1 Год назад

    Thanks! My son told me about shared neutrals when I attempted to remove some aluminum wire in a panel that didn't seem to be doing anything. He said sometimes electricians use neutrals to save on wire and best left alone until the circuits can be checked fully. Panel is circa late 80's

  • @gabriely20
    @gabriely20 Год назад

    I still see shared neutrals being used in new contruction for Dishwasher and Garbage disposal receptacle all the time out here in Az.
    I did not find in the NEC anything about those breaker needing to be tie together but it totally makes sense so Im going to start doing it. Thank you foe the awesome presentation

  • @GS-lh2nx
    @GS-lh2nx Год назад +5

    Aka multi wire branch circuit? I have some of these in my 70's home. It really threw me off as to why I had 240v circuits feeding 120 volt devices until a friend explained it to me. Excellent video as always. Thx

  • @scotthill4742
    @scotthill4742 Год назад

    Great explanation!!
    Yes I’ve gotten a poke before 3 phase 347v because the wire nut was not on the wires properly. It came from the neutral. Hurts like an sob

  • @samuelg3586
    @samuelg3586 8 месяцев назад

    Awesome video. I am an HVAC Service tech by trade and trying to learn more about non HVAC electrical so this is very helpful

  • @tomhoser9325
    @tomhoser9325 4 месяца назад

    Excellent explanation of the shared neutral. As a lighting designer, we could share a neutral with each of three phases when laying out a large system like an office corridor. It was easy to balance the loads, they were all the same fixtures with the same lamps, and it did save a ton of wire in these big spaces.

  • @patrickgr1547
    @patrickgr1547 4 месяца назад

    Thank you 👌 my 1940’s bungalow I keep finding tricky electrical issues with. Spilts tapped up in the walls and in the attic entirely without junction boxes. Then when the time came and the old fuse panel was replaced with circuit breakers. They threw some new wires at it and walked away. I’m stripping the attic out to air seal and insulate. I’m installing new low voltage LED lighting while I’m up there.

  • @christophermccord2757
    @christophermccord2757 5 месяцев назад

    Thank you for this video. We are actually having to do this in some apartment buildings right now (they want all plugs on their own breaker, and it is in the blueprint to run them like this). Great info to k ow before we turn the power on.

  • @network_king
    @network_king Год назад +6

    Other danger i see is if on and remove the main neutral then you have 240V like you said but also may end up with the loads being wired in series. Series in theory each would get 120V but it would depend on the current draw of those devices. The larger draw would pull more voltage but could also fry the other device due to drawing too much current through it.
    This is also why when I work on even dead circuits I splice things in this order Ground, neutral, hot. That way you are really only exposing yourself to the hot potential once as oposed to splice the hot then the neutral. Ground first just should there be issue and sometimes for small fixtures it is a nice anchor point to hold it till you can get the other wires linked.

    • @TomCee53
      @TomCee53 5 месяцев назад

      Your basic logic is sound, but I think you’re confusing voltage and current. The larger draw would get less voltage. If you run a 60 watt bulb and a 100 watt bulb in series across 240 volts, the 60 watt bulb will see 150 volts and the 100 watt bulb will see 90 volts. (Ohms law).

  • @TCAPChrisHandsome
    @TCAPChrisHandsome Год назад +1

    I'm not an electrician, but I have done some electrical work, because my state is pretty lenient with that stuff. However, my rule when I fool with anything electrical is to shut off as far back as I can without it being a problem. For example, I had to change my dryer plug awhile back, I flipped the breaker labeled "dryer" and I tested the plug, and it still said 120 volts. Someone had something wired wrong, and I didn't know where the other line for the dryer was, and I still don't know what the second line on the dryer breaker went to, so I just had to kill the whole house, just to change one receptacle. That's the fun of living in a 30 year old house trailer, that God knows who has lived in before you.

  • @MrKen59
    @MrKen59 Год назад +1

    Reminds me of switch loops and the measures electricians used in the 80’s to combine wires to save a few feet. Navigating the branches in a home from this era is a mess - fortunately they didn’t play the shared neural game in my house.
    On a side note - one example of a shared neutral application today would be to a main lug sub-panel.

  • @omrtnz5100
    @omrtnz5100 Год назад

    Thats good to know. Just bought a house with older wiring and I tend to work basic repairs or replacements live. But never again until I make sure its 💯 safe.

  • @colinstu
    @colinstu Год назад +1

    Great vid!

  • @jbontra2
    @jbontra2 Год назад

    Recently had a situation that they had run 12/2 and tied the neutrals together in another switch box. We we’re replacing a bathroom outlet with a GFCI ( place was built in the early 70’s ). Couldn’t get the GFI to set. I had to start running down the wires in the other places that the power went out with that breaker. Found the neutrals tied together in a switch box.

  • @johnt2491
    @johnt2491 5 месяцев назад

    I'm not an electrician by trade. Yet watching this video made my jaw drop. 😮😮😮 WOW (and scary). Fantastic information, thank you so much!!!!

  • @user-jx2zz4lb5d
    @user-jx2zz4lb5d 2 месяца назад

    Awesome content. Thankyou sir

  • @juanojeda2982
    @juanojeda2982 Год назад

    Your a good teacher man honestly 👌. Never cared about electricity but I’m more interested now and wow it’s a lot to it especially in old houses when changin outlets it’s hard to tell if there shared neutrals off separate breakers as a lot of code is different now 😤

  • @workingmanrondoyle3287
    @workingmanrondoyle3287 Год назад +2

    Great video 👍. One thing that I keep finding in older homes I'm called to with shared neutrals. The neutrals shared with the red and black on the (same phase) which- could cause overheating/over current carrying conditions on the neutral wire.

    • @keything8487
      @keything8487 Год назад +1

      i think that would keep the potential for 240v down.....still notta good idea

    • @JPLaJeunesse
      @JPLaJeunesse Год назад

      In theory the phase is alternating so electricity flows in equal opposite times down the wire not doubling up, sometimes getting out of balance but the idea is they don’t heat the neutral more than the hot because of alternating current and also the load supplied has slightly less current coming back

    • @workingmanrondoyle3287
      @workingmanrondoyle3287 Год назад

      @@JPLaJeunesse I agree with most of what you said. But for the neutral carrying alternating current from shared red and black Has to be on separate/different phases for the neutral to carry the unbalanced load so as it won't overheat. Would be good video content as an experiment to prove this theory 🤔

  • @andrewfischer8564
    @andrewfischer8564 Год назад +1

    yea we ran 12 /3/4 until very recently. on home runs we would pull three phases one neutral one ground. saved alot of room in the conduit, ment more circuits in a smaller pipe.

  • @simi_Fili_Tongi
    @simi_Fili_Tongi 9 месяцев назад

    Thank you just what l needed!

  • @ryanmcmanus2424
    @ryanmcmanus2424 Год назад

    I wired my workshop using shared natural so that I could have two circuits in every junction box (I used different colored outlets for each circuit) so I could balance my draw when using two tools at once (ie a saw and dust collection) and it was easier to pull a 12/3 wire vs 2 12/2 wires.... but I labeled both circuits in the box as a shared natural and tied the two breakers together with a bar.

  • @svinnthefallen1486
    @svinnthefallen1486 Год назад +1

    Sawmill tech here. You should cover ground loop when dealing with a short to one side of a "space saver". I had a light switch cover plate that had 110v to ground after removing it from jbox. And the switch was. In good working order.

  • @josephdestaubin7426
    @josephdestaubin7426 Год назад

    I love your content and really appreciate the work that you do. Having said that, I'm always a little confused about why it would matter whether the powers turned off or not. If PPE has been uand proper procedures be used, it doesn't generally matter. I will readily admit that there are times when I will absolutely turn power off, for instance when there's a mechanical device like a condenser fan replacemeant, or I'm pulling a motor, We're working on sense of electronics that I need to unplug and I need to protect. But the usefulness of having the power live, particularly when doing diagnostics, really can't be overstated. And yeah, you get shocked when you first learning how to do this,. But if you can survive the apprenticeship, you learn not to get shocked. Having said that I've been bitten by 120, 208, and 277. Those last 2 are not fun, but also not something that happens more than once.

  • @traog
    @traog 3 месяца назад +1

    In cases of a shared neutral it should be connected to a load with a pigtail so that if the load is to be disconnected the neutral connection isn't being opened. Some of the older buildings I work in have 120/208 3ph panels with 3phases sharing the same neutral, I see it all the time non pigtailed neutrals at receptials and lighting ccts it can be a challenge to determine which 3 ccts are involved.

  • @robburton3255
    @robburton3255 5 месяцев назад

    Wish I had seen this sooner! I was baffled when I got a good buzz! And then I couldn’t figure out why I would see 240v. Thank you for clearing that up! The house was built in 1967. Some crazy wiring in it.

  • @allhoursmaintenance3022
    @allhoursmaintenance3022 Год назад

    My house has that type of wiring. The cool thing is they soldered all multiple wires then taped no wire nuts, 1941 vintage. Nice video.

  • @COTU9
    @COTU9 4 дня назад

    That was a great explanation. The white board work was really helpful. Thanks.

  • @garretrobinson3668
    @garretrobinson3668 Год назад +5

    It’s pretty wild to hear Dustin mention my name. I’ve been watching the channel since I first got into the electrical trade and it’s been a huge help. I appreciate you sharing your knowledge and experience with the rest of us. Thanks!

    • @chadg6874
      @chadg6874 Год назад +2

      The only thing though is your comment needs to say "bruh" and is missing a 🤙

  • @JOHNPHUFNAGEL
    @JOHNPHUFNAGEL Год назад

    I had my helper shut off a breaker for 240v lights, I didn't think to tell him to shut both breakers off and he only did 1. I got an eye opening experience when I took the wire nuts off thinking that the power was completely off. Thanks for your videos!

    • @Goldern
      @Goldern 7 месяцев назад

      240v on double single breakers? That’s crazy, should be a double breaker

  • @pilatedndlovu8980
    @pilatedndlovu8980 6 месяцев назад

    Very helpful Thank you

  • @nussbaumjm
    @nussbaumjm 3 месяца назад

    Hey man, love the videos. Keep it up. What Code section covers the handle tied breaker?

  • @jaydee3046
    @jaydee3046 4 месяца назад

    I had a 200 amp panel installed and noticed there many joined cicuit breakers. Asked the electrician about it, and he said our state (CA) now requires that setup. When I asked about troubleshooting just one circuit breaker, he said go ahead and pull the tie off.

  • @PhinAI
    @PhinAI Год назад +3

    Important to think about during ballast replacements in 277V applications in large rooms with rows of lighting fed by multiple circuits. I'm sure there's nothing like having a hot neutral fall off of the fixture your working on into your ear or eye while standing on a ladder.

    • @docferringer
      @docferringer Год назад +1

      277 is a bit harsh for beginners. Start 'em off with a 120V lighting circuit with the switch on the neutral side, then leave them unattended while the old "I turned off the switch do I really need to turn off the breaker too?" argument plays out in their heads.

  • @LostInThe0zone
    @LostInThe0zone 5 месяцев назад

    My current home was built in the late 60s as a part of a 450 home subdivision. Without going into detail, I discovered that this technique was used in the construction of these homes.
    Once I learned of this, I was much more careful working on circuits in the house, but I will say that it's difficult to identify the other circuit that shares the neutral.

  • @danielsharples7649
    @danielsharples7649 Год назад

    Im an electrician from Australia. Just moved to Canada and been seing alot of weird shit like this. We don’t have split phase in Australia. Thanks so much for this explanation.

  • @jeffdutton1910
    @jeffdutton1910 4 месяца назад

    in the course of retiring some old cables in my house I found a ceiling light fixture with 2 circuits in the box. The light was controlled through a switch at either end of the staircase. Whoever wired it originally ran 14/2 between the switches, so at the light fixture there was no neutral available...until he brought in another circuit and tapped the neutral. It made my blood run cold. On a later renovation project we had the cable running between the switches exposed as the drywall was off, so I was able to replace the cable run.

  • @cleanpowerelectric
    @cleanpowerelectric Год назад

    Well now i have to go up to my fishing cabin and install a tied pair of breakers. Thanks, learn something new every vid.

  • @rogerhodges7656
    @rogerhodges7656 10 месяцев назад

    This explains some unexpected shocks that I have had! Ouch!

  • @nobrizzle
    @nobrizzle 4 месяца назад

    Thanks! This is an awesome heads up as I've never thought of that and am a novice to home electrical work.
    I have a very strange situation that led me to this video and in short, I have a 220v breaker turning on a 110v circuit (bathroom, etc.) and what looks like power fluctuations in some of the outlets & the oven. My uncle mentioned I have a "floating" neutral I need to find. He said that the neutral and ground wires are not supposed to connect/be shared anywhere except back at the sub-panel (I think) and his believes this is the source of the strange stuff I'm seeing and/or a neutral is being "borrowed" from another circuit. There was one of the main 100 amp fuses coming in from the street but he's saying that's not why I'm seeing the power fluctuations.
    A video about why you can't share a ground with neutrals would be great since that doesn't make sense to me why electrically it wouldn't work. It sounds like from this video it should work but it's just dangerous to work on live (not that I'd do that)?
    He's telling me I need to test each outlet/circuit to find the issue. I'm guessing I need to disconnect each and every neutral at the bus bar in the subpanel, then I can test for continuity between the grounds and neutrals at each switch/outlet to see where they are wrongly connected?

    • @terryuland6502
      @terryuland6502 4 месяца назад +1

      The neutral and ground must be bonded together once and only once at the point of first disconnect. If they are bonded together somewhere else, between that point and the first bond, the parallel paths cause current to flow on both the neutral AND the ground conductor in inverse proportion to the resistance of the conductor. (Just learned this myself while hooking up a portable generator to my main panel via breaker and interlock)

  • @j2o3sh
    @j2o3sh Год назад

    You wouldn’t believe how many electricians I work with that don’t know this lol. I try and explain it to them and it isn’t getting through…. I’ll show them this . Good video!

  • @chrislester3152
    @chrislester3152 Год назад +1

    Hey I think your videos are great for beginners and I think you have a great way for normal people to understand things, I’m hope you could help clarify some more about two hots one neutral, because of the video about running cross overs from 120 volt generators, to a panel . So I’m wandering about wouldn’t that be same as adding the Amps of all the loads the generator pushes and would it double the amps on the neutral back to the generator,
    Any thoughts would be helpful and thanks

  • @B29guy1
    @B29guy1 4 месяца назад

    LOVE your information!! LOVE your insight. Thank you for all that you do.
    Since the 1960's, I have been repairing vacuum tube electronics. The very main thing to do is to isolate the hot to common by replacing the "death caps" and installing a polarized plug. I like the 2 prong that only fit pole outlets. I get many comments that I am wrong by not using 3-prong, however, I do not want to ground the common at the outlet. Am I wrong? Should I be better by using a 3 and leave the ground prong open? Is the 2-prong polarized still the best in your opinion? (I'm sure that the common is energized regardless of what plug is used, anyway).
    THANK you MUCH!!

  • @patrickwendling6759
    @patrickwendling6759 5 месяцев назад

    Thank you for your knowledge and video's USA 🇺🇸

  • @mattsavyoutime4689
    @mattsavyoutime4689 Год назад

    another great video

  • @patrickzavas
    @patrickzavas 4 месяца назад

    Most commercial projects my employer had us run one neutral per 3 conductors on a three-phase panel.
    All of these loads were calculated and balanced of first to the best of our ability

  • @jaylee8542
    @jaylee8542 Год назад

    This actually happened to me on a shut down. We were replacing a set of gear and had all the conductors disconnected. Both sides of the mains were locked and tagged out. I was wedged inside the gear, assembling the neutral buss. All at once the gear became energized and I was getting the shock of my life. While the system we were working on was locked and tagged, there was a neutral somewhere in the building that was tapped in to what we were working on. A time clock had came on and some of that unbalanced load came back through the feeders that terminated in the gear we were in. Coincidentally, three phases that we had tied up had floated over and were touching the gear. That was the first time I went home and thought about never going back.

    • @extremekilla316
      @extremekilla316 Год назад +1

      Wow glad you’re okay

    • @Goldern
      @Goldern 7 месяцев назад

      Ground the neutral and then that shouldn’t happen

  • @jimcapino1667
    @jimcapino1667 Год назад +1

    I am laughing tonight. This just happened to me. I work in Pepco substations. These people follow no rules. We have hot red, white,green, and black. I opened a circuit and checked for power. Fellow electrician turned on a different set of lights , on the other side of the building. I got a nice tingle. Got my meter and yes 120 at neutral. Shared neutral seems worse than just getting hit by black. Thanks

    • @workingshlub8861
      @workingshlub8861 Год назад

      i label shared neutral or mwbc on every box and breaker etc......

  • @Silky_boi
    @Silky_boi Год назад

    I’ve always been told that for MBC’s to add a handle tie for two singles, or replace the two with a double pole, and just mark the 2 with “MBC”

  • @garyorlic3080
    @garyorlic3080 Год назад

    Excellent video! I am constantly telling guys that electricity doesnt care about the color of the wire..... You have to understand its path not its color.

  • @frankcarone3657
    @frankcarone3657 Год назад

    It's a significant savings when you are doing a big job. In Chicago We can put 9 wires in a conduit, that would be (6) 3 wire circuits or only (4) 2 wire Circuits. We use a 2 pole breaker and use a wire tie to bind the three wire circuit together where it enters the panel. When connecting power poles in office cubicles and outlet buss ways, they are all wired from the manufactures with 3 wire circuits, so they are a necessary evil. If you have a lot of expensive electronic equipment, 2 wire circuits are best practice.

  • @spanny52
    @spanny52 5 месяцев назад

    Shared Neutral shocks are the worst! Thanks for the video!

  • @t.bennett5587
    @t.bennett5587 Месяц назад

    Great video

  • @gregweidenhammer5022
    @gregweidenhammer5022 11 месяцев назад

    Your attic light example for the branch circuit is actually very common at least here in the south. Two story homes typically have two furnaces, often in the attic. Branch circuits are used so each blower is on its own 15A circuit. I've had two electricians tell me different things about using dual pole breakers on that circuit. One told me to pull the tie bar off the breaker as it would prevent the breaker from tripping if only one of the circuits went overcurrent, the other told me to leave it to protect anyone from working on that branch from accidently being shocked. Comments?

  • @kinchu007
    @kinchu007 3 месяца назад

    "Now you have a 240V shock on your hands" classic!...loved the video thanks

  • @ksarnelli
    @ksarnelli Год назад

    I have a bunch (5) of these multi wire branch circuits in my 2014 house, so I guess it's not just older houses. Fortunately they're all on double pole breakers.

  • @OtisPlunk
    @OtisPlunk 3 месяца назад

    I always anticipate that something won’t be correctly done. Just found multi wire branch circuits run from a quad-breaker with the ever popular handle tie delete option. Eaton quad handle ties fit nicely on Murray quads. I always expect Neutrals to go live when unbuttoned until I check them with my chicken-stick post disconnect. I think Uncle Fester used a lost panel neutral to energize his light bulb.

  • @BrodyMorgan0805
    @BrodyMorgan0805 Год назад

    Don’t know if it’s been talked about before in any of your videos. But I switched neutral would be somthing people need to understand and learn if they ever encountered it

  • @robertshivers7156
    @robertshivers7156 Год назад +1

    question on any kind of 10/3,12/3,14/3 aren't the hot conductors supposed to be landed on a 2 pole breaker to keep you from getting shocked off the neutrals?