I have seen instances where a light switch to a ceiling fixture was put  
in the neutral side, nd not the hot side of the line.

  I have also seen where some hams, to save money, were using 120 volt 3  
prong plugs for their mobile radios. Thinking what would happen if someone  
else plugged it into a 120 volt outlet, ha ha ha.
  I also dislike 12 volt light fixtures that take a 12 volt screw in bulb  
of the same size as a 120 volt light bulb. Took me a while to figure that  
out on a 5th wheel I had, and putting a 120volt bulb in it would not  
light. A previous owner had rewired the light over the bathroom sink for  
120 volts, but using zip cord.

  At one corner of a 10 acre plot, of which I own 1/4, there is an  
electrical box on a pole, no switches or breakers, that still has 430  
volts coming into it.
  they use a lot of supposed 480 volt motors around here for oil well  
pumps. They wire two transformer outputs in series to get the 480. Some,  
but not all, meter boxes are marked 480 volts.

  I see a lot of poor wiring around this area. I even found one outlet in  
this house, one of only two left, that had the white and black wires  
reversed. I redid that before I hooke that line up to a new breaker panel.  
I had to extend the wire, but did that in a box to be sure of what I had.
  I always tend to check each outlet to be sure it is wired correctly.
  Most of the ceiling lights that had been in here were poorly wired with  
no boxes at the fixtures. I'm putting in boxes where I will be wiring  
ceiling/wall fixtures.
  It doesn't take that much to do a proper wiring job, compared to a lousy  
jb with possible hazards...
  YMMV

  Wayne WA2YNE


On Sat, 05 Jul 2008 01:39:50 -0500, Bruce Bagwell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  
wrote:

>
>
> There are many makes of voltage sensing sticks one can get basically  
> anywhere.
>
> Many times I have seen outlets "Converted" to 3 wire from two, only to  
> find all they did was "ground" from the neutral wire.  That means I get  
> all kinds of RFI and if the "Ground" ever dropped, it would be HOT just  
> from the return from the light bulb or whatever.
>
> BTW, those cheap "Testers" will NOT detect HOT/Ground/Neutral Reverse!
>
> If in doubt, run a wire from a known ground to your Meter and find what  
> wires are "Hot"
>
> I remember A house I rented, every time I touched the light  
> switch/outlet in the garage I got "tickled"
> Glad I knew what was going on or else I might have made full contact,  
> and I would not be typing this right now!
> Swapped the HOT/Neutral/Ground and all was OK!
>
> Always remember, just because the outlet is "Grounded" does not mean it  
> is really "Grounded"  Verify!!!!!
>
> Stay safe out there!
>
> Bruce Bagwell
> KE5TPN
>
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