English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Hi, I just recently moved and noticed that when I turn on the A.C in my room, the electricity goes out. So, i have to go and turn on the braker when that happens. Why does this happen? Thanks

2006-08-08 06:56:42 · 12 answers · asked by NJ friend 1 in Consumer Electronics Other - Electronics

12 answers

When you turn on the A/C it overloads the circuit in your room. You will find your room is on a 20 amp breaker. The national safety code allows for 2/3 or 16 amps to be drawn on a 20 amp breaker. This is a safety factor that keeps from causeing a fire. You can add up all the watts of power being used in your room, each light bulb, radio, TV, clock, and A/C. If all things being used does not go over 1920 watts, your ok. This will tell you, you have a bad breaker. Amps times voltage = watts. voltage being 120. No you can not put in a larger breaker, this will burn your house down.

2006-08-08 07:27:03 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

you probably did no longer state no count if that's in an area of dwelling, business development, distribution lines, etc!! it extremely is a hazard that an electric powered value might desire to be held on the stay twine. Any value on those wires in a house/place of dwelling (residences homes could be dealt with as business homes.) does no longer be adequate to do anybody injury and you will possibly probable no longer experience it or see a spark. as long as you're useful the skill is off on that circuit, it extremely is risk-free to diminish the wires. If this could be an exceptionally long skill line which contain distribution lines, skill feed in factories, intense voltage skill feeds, there's a risky residual voltage on the wires. those could be examined and discharged and point-headed top formerly getting too close to to them no longer to point touching or reducing the wires. in case you're not sure what you're doing, hire a qualified electrician.

2016-11-04 03:33:07 · answer #2 · answered by filonuk 4 · 0 0

Too much into one outlet. It's an electrical problem. However they wired the house, they have too much going into one. If you have anything else running...try shutting it all off except the AC, if that doesn't work then you might need to move your AC to a room that doesn't have that issue. If you have no other option - talk to the landlord.

2006-08-08 07:03:04 · answer #3 · answered by saintlyinnocents 3 · 0 0

The breaker or circuit is probably overloaded, especially is this is a window unit that plugs into the wall. If too many things are trying to run on the same circuit it will overload and trip the breaker.

2006-08-08 07:01:20 · answer #4 · answered by Jennifer S 2 · 0 0

you are using more power (amps) on that circuit than the breaker rating.

try turning off other things when you run the AC
or plug the AC into another room with a long cord and see if that helps

2006-08-08 07:01:20 · answer #5 · answered by brainiac 4 · 0 0

Your AC is probably pulling more juice (AMPS) than allotted for the outlet it's plugged into- the breaker goes off because it can't handle the pull of electricity needed.

2006-08-08 07:02:10 · answer #6 · answered by sandradee310 2 · 0 0

Maybe you have too many things on one circuit, so when you turn on the Air Conditioning it uses to much power and blows the fuse. I recommend calling an electrician ASAP, or go to one of those Home Depot workshops.

2006-08-08 07:00:13 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It happens because the power coming in to your house is not enough to supply what you are using.

It is dangerous , it can lead to a short circuit and or a fire.
You should really have an electrician look at it.

2006-08-08 07:02:08 · answer #8 · answered by Neal J 4 · 0 0

It's draining too much power & tripped the breaker. Turn off any other electricity in the room (i.e. turn off the overhead light, lamps, TV, etc) before you turn it on.

2006-08-08 07:01:04 · answer #9 · answered by amg503 7 · 0 0

You are using too much power at once and over powering the circuit. If it didn't shut off it could blow up.

2006-08-08 07:00:53 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers