In a Single-Phase Supply system, the lower voltage (typically 120V) will be the ‘Line to Neutral Voltage’ which is the voltage between one of the lines and the neutral. The higher voltage (typically 240V) will be the ‘Line to Line Voltage’.

What should the voltage be between line and neutral?

The voltage between the two legs (called phase to phase or line to line) is 240V and the phase to neutral voltage is 120V. The 120/240 notation identifies the phase to neutral voltage followed by the phase to phase voltage.

Does neutral line have voltage?





The neutral wire is often said to have zero voltage on it. If you touch that wire on a live system, however, you will often find out very quickly that technically having zero voltage is very different from meaning there is no electricity present.

Is neutral wire same as line?

Line wires comprise three wires that stand for hot, neutral both are insulated and ground bare wire. While load wires are wires that transmit electricity from the electrical device to other devices within the building, load wires are also known as outgoing or downstream wires.

What is the voltage between the hot wire and neutral wire?

Hot-neutral is the load voltage. Voltage should read about 120 V (typically 115 V to 125 V). You measure exactly 118.5 V. Neutral ground is a voltage drop (also called IR drop) caused by load current flowing through the impedance of the white wire.

Why do I have 120 volts between neutral and ground?

If you have a neutral wire removed from the neutral bus bar in your panel it is possible to see 120VAC on that wire if the circuit breaker for that circuit is turned on and there is a load connected to the circuit and load device is also turned on.

Why does my neutral wire have voltage?





The voltage you are seeing on the neutral wire is conducting through that other load from the hot. Your voltage tester is detecting voltage without drawing current so the resistance of the other load is not seen. Try disconnecting/turning off all other loads on that circuit.

Should there be voltage between neutral and ground?

Some neutral-to-ground voltage should be present under load conditions, typically 2V or less. If the voltage is zero with a load on the circuit, then check for a neutral-to-ground connection in the receptacle, whether accidental or intentional.

Does neutral wire carry current?

To sum up, a live wire carries the full load current, while a neutral wire carries some current, only when the loads are not balanced.

Can ground and neutral be on same bar?

The answer is never. Grounds and neutrals should only be connected at the last point of disconnect. This would be at main panels only.

Why does the neutral and ground have to be separated at the panel?



With ground and neutral bonded, current can travel on both ground and neutral back to the main panel. If the load becomes unbalanced and ground and neutral are bonded, the current will flow through anything bonded to the sub-panel (enclosure, ground wire, piping, etc.) and back to the main panel. Obvious shock hazard!

What happens if neutral touches ground?

In Short if neutral wire touches a earth wire,

An earth wire carrying load current is a risk of electric shock because a person touching this earth may present an alternative path for the load current and thus the risk of electric shock.

Should neutral and ground be bonded?



A high-resistance reading (typically greater than 200 ohms) indicates that there are no metallic paths between the panel and the transformer, and therefore a neutral-to-ground bond in a grounded system is required.

What happens if you don’t bond neutral?

That is as situation where a hot to ground short occurs, which is a very common fault. If the ground is not bonded to neutral, then the entire ground circuit in the building becomes close to hot until the circuit breaker trips.

Do neutral and ground go to the same bus?

At the service panel (ONLY AT THE SERVICE PANEL – HUGELY IMPORTANT) the neutral bus bar is bonded to ground. You should see the ground lead and neutral tied to the same bus (the neutral bus bar).