11-08-2020, 05:09 PM
A friend had a house moved to some land he owns and once the subdivision on the land goes through He’ll set the house on a foundation and use it as a rental and future in-laws residence. The electrical panel isn’t labeled. he’s trying to do as much as he can with the electrical and plumbing and going through the systems to save time after the house is put on the foundation. He has an existing powered building on the property . He wired a 110 V extension cord from that building to one of the breakers in the panel so that he can start tracing circuits -checking lights, testing outlets, etc. .That worked until he jumpered that breaker to an adjacent breaker to get both sides is the panel hot. When he did that it started tripping the GFI breaker at the existing building. We’re wondering why. The house that was moved had no meter and no connection to the grid or ground rod, etc. the neutral and ground on the extension cord is connected to the neutral bus of the house panel, the house panel has neutral bonded to ground. I’m thinking that with both sides of the breaker bus powered that results in an imbalance across the neutral/ground.