Thursday, September 30, 2010
Beware of Fire Hazards
Fuses and circuit breakers are designed to protect you from inadvertently overloading a circuit. When your loads demand more current than the circuit is designed to handle, the circuit breaker will trip or the fuse will blow. This prevents the conductors or wire from overheating and causing a fire. A conductor can only offer a certain amount of resistance to a current; if there’s too much current, the conductor can heat up enough to melt its insulation.
A homeowner can create a dangerous situation by replacing a fuse or a circuit breaker with one of larger amperage, thus allowing more current to flow through the wires than they can safely resist. A fire can start without tripping the breaker or blowing the fuse because the larger-amperage fuse cannot sense the problem. Some signs of a potentially overloaded system include …
➤ Thirty-amp fuses used for lighting circuits.
➤ The use of extension cords as permanent wiring.
➤ Dimming lights when appliance loads go on.
➤ Excessive use of adapters that allow more than two loads to be plugged into one receptacle.
➤ Multiple service panels and sloppy wiring practices.
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