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John Arnold
04-03-2013, 09:19 AM
This is a third floor condo non-service panel in the basement of the building. There is a cable running between the common areas panel, which I did not open, and the condo panel shown in the photo. The black conductor is connected to a 20A circuit breaker. The neutral and equipment ground conductors have been clipped and taped over.
As the kids say, WTF? All hypotheses accepted with my thanks in advance.

28452

William Cline
04-03-2013, 09:56 AM
You need to open the other panel to be definate about what is going on. My first thought is the other panel is full, they needed another circuit, did not have the knowledge to determine the neutral that went with the circuit they needed to power, so they bootlegged to this panel. Violates code (neutral, ground, and hot in same conduit/raceway). Needs to be corrected.

Steven Turetsky
04-03-2013, 11:23 AM
I would also like to see what the other end is doing, and I'm curious as to how it was installed. Does it looked like this cable was run after the original installation? From the little I see, what I see looks out of place with everything else. It looks like an extension cord that was cannibalized.

I'm wondering if there was a fault on an original hot, and someone felt it easier to run a jumper, than to locate the fault. Of course if they did that, they should have replaced both wires. Is there anything else in the box... like something cut off?

is there an unaccounted for neutral?

John Arnold
04-03-2013, 11:32 AM
...Is there anything else in the box... like something cut off?
...

Just the cut neutral and ground in that orange cable. I unwrapped the tape enough to see what was there, as in my photo, and then taped it back up.

Steven Turetsky
04-03-2013, 12:14 PM
Well, I definitely am curious about the other end. If they won't let you in, that's okay. What you already see is enough to recommend an electrician.

Steven Saville
04-03-2013, 05:37 PM
Hmm, I would suspect a circuit for the common areas is stealing from the condo's metered service to avoid paying for a particular use i.e. common building lighting? :biggrin:

Jerry Peck
04-03-2013, 07:16 PM
That orange cable looks like it is either extension cord ... and that would be a super no-no ... or it is 3-conductor cable and 3-conductor cable would have a red, a black, a white, and a bare ground ... okay, so where is the red conductor? :confused:

Steven Saville
04-03-2013, 08:03 PM
That orange cable looks like it is either extension cord ... and that would be a super no-no ... or it is 3-conductor cable and 3-conductor cable would have a red, a black, a white, and a bare ground ... okay, so where is the red conductor? :confused:

Definitely looks like an extension cord. All the more reason to suspect something fishy going on.

Dom D'Agostino
04-04-2013, 04:28 AM
Looks like orange NM cable to me, probably 10/2.
Are there any extension cords with solid (non-stranded) wiring?

John Arnold
04-04-2013, 04:53 AM
Hmm, I would suspect a circuit for the common areas is stealing from the condo's metered service to avoid paying for a particular use i.e. common building lighting? :biggrin:

My money is also on the stealing scenario.

John Kogel
04-04-2013, 12:27 PM
Some condos here have had hard wiring added for smoke alarms. This might be what that mess is all about, except that Mr Handy who lives in the building has taken it on to save $$. Now it will cost them double.

I found a condo unit last year in a small building that had a feeder running off to the common laundry area, where there are a washer and dryer for everyone to use. At the new owner's expense. Nice.

Daniel Mack
04-05-2013, 09:20 AM
If the panel pictured is in the basement, I would think this would be on the common building power. Is this the case? It certainly looks like a stranded conductor the way it is going into the breaker lug. Can you see any of the printing on the cable in question? Bottom line, this is a code violation. NEC 300.3 (B) and 300.5 (I). Notes on safety: OSHA 1910.333(a)(1) clearly emphasizes the dangers involved with energized circuits. NFPA 70E is another must read if you all are going to be opening and inspecting anything energized.

Mbrooke
04-05-2013, 09:46 AM
Some condos here have had hard wiring added for smoke alarms. This might be what that mess is all about, except that Mr Handy who lives in the building has taken it on to save $$. Now it will cost them double.

I found a condo unit last year in a small building that had a feeder running off to the common laundry area, where there are a washer and dryer for everyone to use. At the new owner's expense. Nice.


My bet its power theft for the landord to keep rents down. Classic way to save mulah. Seen it before.

Sadly legally theres not much that can be done because the theft is after the meters.

John Kogel
04-05-2013, 10:21 AM
My bet its power theft for the landord to keep rents down. Classic way to save mulah. Seen it before.

Sadly legally theres not much that can be done because the theft is after the meters.The good part is that it is a flagrant violation of the NEC, and a fire safety hazard, so the home buyer has a good chance at having it all removed.

In the mean time, a flip of the breaker handle solves to problem for now. :biggrin:

Ian Page
04-05-2013, 03:27 PM
This is a third floor condo non-service panel in the basement of the building. There is a cable running between the common areas panel, which I did not open, and the condo panel shown in the photo. The black conductor is connected to a 20A circuit breaker. The neutral and equipment ground conductors have been clipped and taped over.
As the kids say, WTF? All hypotheses accepted with my thanks in advance.

28452
John,
If you did not open the common areas panel, how do you know the orange cord(?) runs between the two panels...? Just curious.

Jerry Peck
04-05-2013, 06:35 PM
That orange cable looks like it is either extension cord ... and that would be a super no-no ... or it is 3-conductor cable and 3-conductor cable would have a red, a black, a white, and a bare ground ... okay, so where is the red conductor? :confused:

Did I miss it or has no one else commented or explained where the red conductor is? I am presuming that it, too, has been cut off, like the white and the bare ground have been.

That leaves only the black conductor in that cable going anywhere ... is the enclosure cabinet and its equipment ground path being used for the 'white' grounded conductor? If so ... YIKES!