Can you combine neutrals together from different circuits?

As these joined neutrals include the travelers of both three-way circuits, the neutrals from the nearest light to each box, and the neutral heading back to the panel from each box, these two circuits’ neutrals have multiple junction points that tie the neutrals together.

Can you combine neutrals?





Even if you meet that condition, you still cannot tie 2 or more #12 neutrals together. Nowadays you also have the fact that tying neutrals of different circuits together will mean tripped AFCI breakers and the time lost troubleshooting them.

How do you wire 3 switches in the same box?


Quote from Youtube video: Together using a wire nut. So you just bunch them all up together like this. And you start to twist. Them.

Can multiple switches use the same neutral wire?

If both switches are powered by the same breaker you can wire both to the same neutral.

How many hot wires can share a neutral?

One neutral may not have two “hot” wires from the same phase. It is good practice to use four (4) pole Circuit breakers (as opposed to the standard three pole) where the fourth pole is the neutral phase, and is hence protected against over current on the neutral conductor.

Can I pigtail a neutral wire?





When making a pigtail, choose a scrap of wire with insulation that is the same color as the circuit wires you are connecting: white pigtails when connecting to neutral wires, red or black when connecting to hot wires, green or bare copper when connecting to grounding wires.

Can you combine neutral and ground in main panel?

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

Do all neutral colors go together?

5. What Colors Go With Neutral Colors? All colors go with neutrals, even other neutrals. That’s the beauty of decorating with neutrals.

What happens if neutral wire 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.

Can neutral wire be shared?



What is a multiwire branch circuit? A multiwire branch circuit is a branch circuit with a shared neutral. This means there are two or more ungrounded (hot) phase or system conductors with a voltage between them and a shared neutral.

What is a borrowed neutral?

A borrowed neutral is when you have two seperate circuits but you have taken the neutral from one circuit to supply the other with a neutral.

Is a neutral required at every switch?

Neutrals. When wiring lighting circuits supplied by a grounded general-purpose branch circuit, the 2011 NEC now requires you to provide a neutral conductor at nearly every switch point [404.2(C)]. The purpose for this is to complete a circuit path for electronic lighting control devices, such as occupancy sensors.

What is neutral overloading?



So, if your neutral is sized the same as your conductor (which is should be), and you overload the neutral, then your hot line is overloaded by the same margin.

Can a dedicated circuit share a neutral?

Moderator. A dedicated vs separate circuit is the argument– As I seeit a dedicated circuit should not share a neutral and a separate circuit may share it.

Why would a neutral wire be hot?

If the neutral is disconnected anywhere between the light bulb and the panel, then the neutral from the light to the point of the break in the neutral will become hot (and the device will be unpowered, because no current will be flowing through it).

What happens if hot wire touches neutral?

A short circuit happens when a “hot” wire (black) touches another hot wire or touches a “neutral” wire (white) in one of your outlets. When these two wires touch, a large amount of current flows, creating more heat than the circuit can handle, so it shuts off.

Why am I getting 120 volts on my neutral?



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.

Is there voltage on the neutral?

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.

Why do I have 80 volts on my neutral?

Check voltage across each conductors. If you read 80V between the hot and neutral, and read 120V between the hot and ground. You have a malfunctioning neutral. If you read 80V between hot and both the neutral and ground your problem is with the hot conductor.

Should neutral be grounded?

Hot wires are red, black, or another color, while neutral wires are white. In residential codes, the neutral wire is always supposed to be grounded (connected to the ground wire).