What is an open neutral?

An open neutral occurs in the panel when a break occurs in the neutral wire that connects the panel to the line transformer. The main effect is that the lights in the house dim and get brighter for no apparent reason. Some lights may get bright enough to burn out.

What causes an open neutral circuit?





An open neutral occurs when the neutral wire has a loose connection between two points. Electrical current flows through the hot wire to powers receptacles, lights, and appliances. The neutral wire completes the circuit path back to the electrical panel.

How do you trace an open neutral?

Quote from the video:
Quote from Youtube video: Panel it could be in the junction. Box if there's a junction box before that first outlet.

What does open neutral ground mean?

Open Neutral Wiring



In an electrical system, ground and neutral are connected together in one location only, at the neutral point. This connection is either at the power company transformer or in or near the main electrical panel of the dwelling (see Electrical Circuits).

Can I leave neutral wire unconnected?

Yes. If you’re getting rid of the receptacle, you should cap off the grounded (neutral) conductor in the switch box. Just make sure there’s no exposed wire sticking out of the connector, and you use a twist-on wire connector rated for a single wire.

Does neutral wire have power?





To summarize: the hot wire carries electricity from the power supply and takes it to the load (lightbulb). Neutral wires take the used electricity from the load and bring it back to the power supply.

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.

Does a neutral wire carry voltage?

Voltage is carried by the live conductor, but a neutral conductor is also necessary for two important functions: Serving as a zero voltage reference point.

Should there be voltage on neutral?

Under load conditions, there should be some neutral-ground voltage – 2 V or a little bit less is pretty typical. If neutral-ground voltage is 0 V – again assuming that there is load on the circuit – then check for a neutral-ground connection in the receptacle, whether accidental or intentional.

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.

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.