Background
Two weeks ago, lightning struck a tree in our yard. Many circuits tripped and several electronic devices failed. There was a strong smell of ozone/electrical burn throughout the house that has since dissipated.
Two AFCI breakers are still problematic. Both serve bedrooms (hence AFCI).
Breaker 1 does not close. I have not forced it, but it immediately springs back to the middle position.
Breaker 2 closes but the test button does not function. I.e. when pressed, the breaker stays closed. We have a third AFCI breaker that does open when the test button is pressed.
These breakers are original to the house, built in 2023.
My plan
I want to replace the two breakers with new AFCI breakers of the same brand (I do not know what brand they are without pulling the panel face) and specs. Once that is done, I will use a basic outlet tester (e.g. with LEDs that indicate hot neutral, ground, etc.) on every outlet in the circuits.
My question
Other than replacing the breakers, verifying that the circuits work as expected, the breakers don’t trip, and the outlet tester reads correctly, what else should I do — or in more general terms, what else would a qualified electrician then do? Should I call a qualified electrician in regardless?
My background
I do not know if this matters, but providing it just in case.
In building a basement woodshop, I installed several lighting and 20-Amp power circuits (with safety switches), entailing the need for new breakers. Two of the new breakers were GFCI and I installed a few GFCI outlets on non-protected circuits (with downstream protected and upstream non-protected receptacles).
Prior to starting work I brought in a local electrical/building inspector to discuss my plans. I had the inspector return around ¾ of the way through the project and after completion to review everything I did. A working electrician has also inspected the work. Inspections included overall visual and opening boxes and pulling units for a closer look. I will likely call in an electrician to inspect my new work just in case.
Edit: I have since added other lighting circuits and switches, outlets, etc. This was just my largest project.
This does not make me qualified for anything, but I hope it suggests that replacing an AFCI breaker is within my small set of skills.
Thank you for any time, advice or guidance you may offer. I hope I provided enough information, and if it's too much, hope I organized it well enough for easy skimming.
Two weeks ago, lightning struck a tree in our yard. Many circuits tripped and several electronic devices failed. There was a strong smell of ozone/electrical burn throughout the house that has since dissipated.
Two AFCI breakers are still problematic. Both serve bedrooms (hence AFCI).
Breaker 1 does not close. I have not forced it, but it immediately springs back to the middle position.
Breaker 2 closes but the test button does not function. I.e. when pressed, the breaker stays closed. We have a third AFCI breaker that does open when the test button is pressed.
These breakers are original to the house, built in 2023.
My plan
I want to replace the two breakers with new AFCI breakers of the same brand (I do not know what brand they are without pulling the panel face) and specs. Once that is done, I will use a basic outlet tester (e.g. with LEDs that indicate hot neutral, ground, etc.) on every outlet in the circuits.
My question
Other than replacing the breakers, verifying that the circuits work as expected, the breakers don’t trip, and the outlet tester reads correctly, what else should I do — or in more general terms, what else would a qualified electrician then do? Should I call a qualified electrician in regardless?
My background
I do not know if this matters, but providing it just in case.
In building a basement woodshop, I installed several lighting and 20-Amp power circuits (with safety switches), entailing the need for new breakers. Two of the new breakers were GFCI and I installed a few GFCI outlets on non-protected circuits (with downstream protected and upstream non-protected receptacles).
Prior to starting work I brought in a local electrical/building inspector to discuss my plans. I had the inspector return around ¾ of the way through the project and after completion to review everything I did. A working electrician has also inspected the work. Inspections included overall visual and opening boxes and pulling units for a closer look. I will likely call in an electrician to inspect my new work just in case.
Edit: I have since added other lighting circuits and switches, outlets, etc. This was just my largest project.
This does not make me qualified for anything, but I hope it suggests that replacing an AFCI breaker is within my small set of skills.
Thank you for any time, advice or guidance you may offer. I hope I provided enough information, and if it's too much, hope I organized it well enough for easy skimming.