Hey I386 are you sure your dogs did not climb up on your roof and chew the service lines
That's one of my favorite iboats pictureshttp://forums.iboats.com/showthread.php?t=233370&highlight=dogs
And 220 stuff is not affected,,,,
.... In England, they use 90v to signal a ring. ....
I can tell you IT WAS NOT the bad (loose) ground ONLY affected the 120 volt circuits!With that problem, 220 stuff would definitely be affected....would not work at all.
tfrank said:With that problem, 220 stuff would definitely be affected....would not work at all.
I can tell you IT WAS NOT the bad (loose) ground ONLY affected the 120 volt circuits!
Maybe try reading the above posts, just a thoughtI am talking about the problem as described by the OP. The root cause was a bad connection on one of his hot lines that internmittantly took it off line.
As I correctly stated, this would absolutely affect the 220 supply...it would be effectively an open circuit, nothing 220 would work.
I'm not sure what you are talking about....a loose ground had nothing to do with this.
Joed said:Syptoms of a loose neutral are different. Some light will be dimming but other will be going brighter.
rwise said:...and (with a loose neutral) 220 stuff is not affected
Come on guys... simple misunderstanding. I had to go back and read it a few times to get it too.
Using quotes would have helped, but I think rwise was just adding to what joed was saying about a loose neutral and not talking abut my loose leg problem....
Now go have a beer er something and make up.![]()
Use the word fire. They will come and fix your problem. ...Just say that you're very worried that the problem might cause a fire.
Works every time.
so did the problem get fixed?