Tracing a rain-related short circuit | on ElectriciansForums

Discuss Tracing a rain-related short circuit in the Periodic Inspection Reporting & Certification area at ElectriciansForums.net

David51

DIY
Joined
Feb 5, 2022
Messages
4
Reaction score
9
Location
Maryland
I have an intermittent short on a circuit with a GFCI breaker and some outdoor fixtures. The breaker pops after a significant rain and won't reset until after several dry days. I've tried to isolate the break by disconnecting the outdoor fixtures sequentially with no luck. Now I'm doing continuity tests on each part of the circuit.

With the power off, should I just be testing for continuity between hot and neutral, or also between hot and ground? Does the fact that the problem is related to moisture make a difference?

Sorry to ask such a basic question, but I couldn't find an answer on YouTube or Wikipedia.

Thanks very much!
 
An insulation test from live to earth will show it up normally
 
An insulation test from live to earth will show it up normally
Thanks very much for the very quick reply, James. For future reference, if a short isn't intermittent and rain-related, would I test continuity across hot/neutral, or hot/ground, or both? What different information, if any, do they provide about the cause of the short? Thanks!
 
I have an intermittent short on a circuit with a GFCI breaker and some outdoor fixtures. The breaker pops after a significant rain and won't reset until after several dry days. I've tried to isolate the break by disconnecting the outdoor fixtures sequentially with no luck. Now I'm doing continuity tests on each part of the circuit.

With the power off, should I just be testing for continuity between hot and neutral, or also between hot and ground? Does the fact that the problem is related to moisture make a difference?

Sorry to ask such a basic question, but I couldn't find an answer on YouTube or Wikipedia.

Thanks very much!
Your fault is not really a short, but a leakage current to ground. I believe somewhere around 6 milliamps of leakage would trip the GFCI, so when looking for the problem, if you were trying to use say a multimeter, you would be looking for a resistance from live to earth of around 20k ohms.
Insulation Resistance is typically measured with an IR meter, or multifunction tester, that uses a high voltage to do the test (which encourages breakdown if there's a problem in the circuit)
You don't mention what you intend doing "continuity tests" with, but you really need to be doing resistance measurements around the value I mention, not continuity tests.
You will need to use a suitable meter that indicates resistance, not a continuity tester.
If you do the detective work during damp conditions (circuit OFF!), you may be lucky and trace the problem with a standard multimeter.
However if it's more elusive, or there's a lack of rain when you're looking, you may have more luck borrowing or hiring a proper insulation resistance meter, or getting an electrician in!
 
Your fault is not really a short, but a leakage current to ground. I believe somewhere around 6 milliamps of leakage would trip the GFCI, so when looking for the problem, if you were trying to use say a multimeter, you would be looking for a resistance from live to earth of around 20k ohms.
Insulation Resistance is typically measured with an IR meter, or multifunction tester, that uses a high voltage to do the test (which encourages breakdown if there's a problem in the circuit)
You don't mention what you intend doing "continuity tests" with, but you really need to be doing resistance measurements around the value I mention, not continuity tests.
You will need to use a suitable meter that indicates resistance, not a continuity tester.
If you do the detective work during damp conditions (circuit OFF!), you may be lucky and trace the problem with a standard multimeter.
However if it's more elusive, or there's a lack of rain when you're looking, you may have more luck borrowing or hiring a proper insulation resistance meter, or getting an electrician in!
Thanks, Avo Mk8, very instructive and helpful. I have a multimeter with a separate resistance mode (10 ohm resolution +/-1.5% in the 40-400K range). The rain stopped yesterday and things have dried out to the point that the GFCI will reset. I'll shut it off and start testing different runs for leakage, not continuity. Thanks again!
 
Thanks, Avo Mk8, very instructive and helpful. I have a multimeter with a separate resistance mode (10 ohm resolution +/-1.5% in the 40-400K range). The rain stopped yesterday and things have dried out to the point that the GFCI will reset. I'll shut it off and start testing different runs for leakage, not continuity. Thanks again!
I would suggest any readings under 100k ohms suggest there's a problem with the cable or fixture In that area
Good luck hunting!

PS You may find resistance readings vary with time as you observe them (I think maybe due to electrochemical effects at the fault with the damp and applied dc voltage). Don't worry about it! Once you've found any value up to the 100k mentioned, you've found a problem!
There's another effect if you have a long cable, namely the capacitance between the cable conductors. That can cause a 'kick' in the measured value, which then settles (depending on your meter) after a second or so.
This is easier to read and understand with an analogue meter! But don't let all this put you off!
See what you can find 🤔
 
Last edited:
I would suggest any readings under 100k ohms suggest there's a problem with the cable or fixture In that area
Good luck hunting!

PS You may find resistance readings vary with time as you observe them (I think maybe due to electrochemical effects at the fault with the damp and applied dc voltage). Don't worry about it! Once you've found any value up to the 100k mentioned, you've found a problem!
There's another effect if you have a long cable, namely the capacitance between the cable conductors. That can cause a 'kick' in the measured value, which then settles (depending on your meter) after a second or so.
This is easier to read and understand with an analogue meter! But don't let all this put you off!
See what you can find 🤔
Mapped the circuit connections, tested each segment, found the likely culprit - the underground branch to the shed. It shows 24K ohms three days after the rain stopped and one day after the breaker would reset. Rain is forecast for later today and the circuit is back on, waiting for the breaker to trip. I'll get a new resistance reading asap after that.

Thanks for all your very clear advice!
 

Reply to Tracing a rain-related short circuit in the Periodic Inspection Reporting & Certification area at ElectriciansForums.net

News and Offers from Sponsors

  • Article
Join us at electronica 2024 in Munich! Since 1964, electronica has been the premier event for technology enthusiasts and industry professionals...
    • Like
Replies
0
Views
299
  • Sticky
  • Article
Good to know thanks, one can never have enough places to source parts from!
Replies
4
Views
807
  • Article
OFFICIAL SPONSORS These Official Forum Sponsors May Provide Discounts to Regular Forum Members - If you would like to sponsor us then...
Replies
0
Views
851

Similar threads

Ok, please be aware that I am a 'do-it-yourself-er,' so if this isn't the right place to be posting this thread, let me know where I should be...
Replies
0
Views
447

OFFICIAL SPONSORS

Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Electrician Courses Green Electrical Goods PCB Way Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Pushfit Wire Connectors Electric Underfloor Heating Electrician Courses
These Official Forum Sponsors May Provide Discounts to Regular Forum Members - If you would like to sponsor us then CLICK HERE and post a thread with who you are, and we'll send you some stats etc

YOUR Unread Posts

This website was designed, optimised and is hosted by untold.media Operating under the name Untold Media since 2001.
Back
Top