mark in tx
New Member
Been having an interesting issue with electric in the shop.
I am running a shop vac and a panel saw on the same circuit. Nothing else on the circuit.
Turn on shop vac, then saw, poof! circuit breaker blows.
Replaced the outlets, they were very old, everything worked fine for 2 weeks.
Today, turned on shop vac, then saw. Poof! Circuit breaker tripped.
hmmm.....now is the time to try crazy things.
I plugged the panel saw into a 100 foot extension cord, changed nothing for the shop vac and everything works.
Can't remember enough of my high school shop class, but if I remember right, the extension cord induces more resistance, which increases the load on the circuit. Which should actually make the circuit more prone to overload and trip the breaker.
But I'm getting the opposite effect here.
Any ideas from the smart people?
Thanks.
I am running a shop vac and a panel saw on the same circuit. Nothing else on the circuit.
Turn on shop vac, then saw, poof! circuit breaker blows.
Replaced the outlets, they were very old, everything worked fine for 2 weeks.
Today, turned on shop vac, then saw. Poof! Circuit breaker tripped.
hmmm.....now is the time to try crazy things.
I plugged the panel saw into a 100 foot extension cord, changed nothing for the shop vac and everything works.
Can't remember enough of my high school shop class, but if I remember right, the extension cord induces more resistance, which increases the load on the circuit. Which should actually make the circuit more prone to overload and trip the breaker.
But I'm getting the opposite effect here.
Any ideas from the smart people?
Thanks.