ECN Electrical Forum - Discussion Forums for Electricians, Inspectors and Related Professionals
ECN Shout Chat
ShoutChat
Recent Posts
Increasing demand factors in residential
by gfretwell - 03/28/24 12:43 AM
Portable generator question
by Steve Miller - 03/19/24 08:50 PM
Do we need grounding?
by NORCAL - 03/19/24 05:11 PM
240V only in a home and NEC?
by dsk - 03/19/24 06:33 AM
Cordless Tools: The Obvious Question
by renosteinke - 03/14/24 08:05 PM
New in the Gallery:
This is a new one
This is a new one
by timmp, September 24
Few pics I found
Few pics I found
by timmp, August 15
Who's Online Now
1 members (CoolWill), 250 guests, and 13 robots.
Key: Admin, Global Mod, Mod
Previous Thread
Next Thread
Print Thread
Rate Thread
#165386 06/26/07 07:25 PM
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 71
S
Member
I was troubleshooting a burning smell when I pulled back a piece of paper-backed insulation. The insulation had a black mark about 18" long where the romex had burned it, and the romex had brown burn marking on the romex for about 18". (These are 120 volt fluorescent fixtures with magnetic ballasts). The ballasts were very hot to the touch but the whole circuit was drawing 4 amps. My thoughts are that the heat from the ballasts caused the burning. Has anyone else come across this before?

sid123456 #165400 06/27/07 01:58 AM
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 806
Member
The answer depends on where the romex was in relation to the ballasts..was it touching them directly or laying on the fixture? And did the burn marks line up with the ballast location? If not, then there is some other issue at work here....and note that a standard magnetic ballast can run very hot to touch normally.

And did you get and pictures? smile




Last edited by mxslick; 06/27/07 01:59 AM. Reason: To fix ballast from "balls" oops!

Stupid should be painful.
sid123456 #165405 06/27/07 03:16 AM
Joined: May 2003
Posts: 2,876
E
e57 Offline
Member
Originally Posted by sid123456
'The ballasts were very hot to the touch'..


Well how hot were they? Sounds like too hot.


Mark Heller
"Well - I oughta....." -Jackie Gleason
e57 #165432 06/27/07 06:34 PM
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 71
S
Member
The romex was in the attic. There was sheetrock between the wire and the fixture with insulation on top of the wire (paper-backed). With the wire only being burnt about 18" past both fixtures, I think the copper transfered the heat from the ballasts that far, and the insulation kept the heat from dissipating. Sorry no pictures. I need to take my camera with me, that would be a great idea.


Link Copied to Clipboard
Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 7.7.5