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My garage light, garage door opener, entry light, and front door light are not coming on. I am figuring it is a breaker but I can't locate the breaker. I have switched them all off and on and even did the main breaker but I can't find what breaker it is. Is it possible that it doesn't have a breaker attached to that area and how would I fix that problem?

2007-03-13 11:09:24 · 10 answers · asked by Carly K 1 in Home & Garden Maintenance & Repairs

I have tried all the GFI and those are OK too. So there are no GFI's to reset which for my garage the only one is for the washer and the washer and dryer both work since they are not on the same breaker. Also, again there aren't any breakers that have "tripped". Thanks for all the great responses. Have an electrician coming out this morning.

2007-03-14 02:39:32 · update #1

10 answers

What you did was to trip the ground fault interrupter. GFI as they are called. Go around and hit the resets on all of those that you can find. Start in the garage with the receptacles there. Good luck.

2007-03-13 11:29:31 · answer #1 · answered by Fordman 7 · 0 0

There is a difference between blowing a breaker and blowing a fuse.
Since breakers are thermo magnetic they usually snap out and you just have to reset them back, when a short circuit is present they will snap out again and they will keep doing this until you fix the short.
A fuse usually blows out and you have to change it since the filament has been burned out (or just change the filament), they too will keep blowing if a short is present. A breaker could be blown if enough electrical force is used. A multimeter is the best way to test the circuit but, if you don't have one at hand a light bulb will suffice. But this is too complicated and has it´s own risks if you are not familiar with electricity so I will give you my favorite:
There must be one of the breakers that you can see is working, that is when you switch it on or off you can see it turns something on or off, turn of the main breaker, take it out and test each of the other breakers for that same position, remember to lower the main breaker to remove, and to switch on the main breaker once in position to test, the breaker that does not light that same zone is the one not working. You probably get the idea.
If it still does not work look out for a fuse box, lower the main switch and check each fuse. Be sure to lower the main switch blade! working with electricity is very dangerous!
These systems exist to protect your wiring if a whole area has stop working and it is on the same vicinity you wiring might have suffered some damage.
I hope this is helpful.

2007-03-13 13:05:04 · answer #2 · answered by jesse 1 · 0 0

look for a ground fault interrupter socket.

It looks like a regular socket but has a reset button on it. They are usually found in garages and bathrooms. It will trip if the tool you plug in is incorrectly grounded. When it trips it will take out a whole circuit, and you won't be able to tell at the panel which one it is.


Once you find this socket, push the reset button and you're back in business. But try to find what's making the ground fault- it could be an open ground wire in the house wiring or your appliance.

I assume you know the locations of all your panels and subpanels. If there breakers besides the main breaker switch in your main service box that are over 30 amps you are probably looking at a subpanel breaker, and you may suspect there is a subpanel somewhere. Rule out your heavy appliances like an electric heater or air conditioner, which should be labeled.

2007-03-13 11:17:15 · answer #3 · answered by Hal H 5 · 1 0

Unless you live in a 3rd world nation, all your outlets are connected to a breaker or fuse box.

Since you say you tried turning the breakers on and aff, I'm also assuming this means you have tried turning off then back on the smaller breakers. It may be possible that your wires are entirely shorted out. If you can smell an electrically burnt smell, this may very well be the case. Or, these are plugged into a GFCI outlet.

2007-03-13 11:16:27 · answer #4 · answered by jeff the drunk 6 · 0 0

Look in the breaker box for the one that is tripped. "Tripped" is identified as about 1/4 of the way out from the center. If you can t find it , turn them all off (1 at a time) and turn them back on. That should solve your problem. This is known as "resetting" the breaker (s).

2007-03-13 11:16:54 · answer #5 · answered by carnivore al a mode 2 · 0 0

Your used dryer salesman is pulling your leg. the flexibility corporation provides one hundred ten volts and 220 volts ability on your place. The breakers are purely there so as that if an equipment tries to entice greater present day than the abode wiring is designed for, the breaker can turn off the juice until now the wires get warm. they can't probable "supply too lots ability" to the applying. out of your description, it sounds to me as though something actual broke (the clank sound) that prevented the drum from turning. The motor saved attempting to do its interest (the humming sound) and saved stressful further and further ability until one factor of the breaker popped. (even nonetheless dryers are rated at 220 volts, it particularly is barely for the heating element; the motor runs on one hundred ten volts drawn from purely one leg of the circuit.) i don't recognize what the heck he ability by using a "swap relay" inspite of the undeniable fact that this is conceivable there's a relay between the timer swap and the motor on your kind. It should not be stressful to locate -- purely hint wires back from the motor. while you're taking the make, kind and serial extensive kind to any good equipment areas keep, they'll probable have one at lifelike fee. frequently timers are the main costly electric powered section on an older dryer and that they are in a position to run as much as $a hundred. i'd assume a relay super sufficient to run a a million/3 hp motor would desire to fee around $15. yet that may not be your situation. i'd be greater worried with regard to the "clank" sound. given which you have not something to lose, why not take the back off the dryer and notice if there is something combating the drum from turning. you additionally can take the belt off the motor pulley and run ability directly to the motor to learn it out. If that each and every person assessments out, this is well worth finding and changing a relay.

2016-12-18 12:51:55 · answer #6 · answered by mijarez 4 · 0 0

Is there a separate box for the garage?
The batteries may be weak in your opener also.
Check the bulbs,too.
If it was a bad breaker, it would trip and stay in a middle position,neither on nor off. If it were really bad,it would be arcing...calling an electrician for help can be costly. Be sure it's nothing simple first.Good Luck!

2007-03-13 11:18:53 · answer #7 · answered by auntgnu62 3 · 0 0

then try them all, you`ll have to reset some clocks. When you snap them back on listen for a solid click, if it doesn`t click it likely a bad breaker

2007-03-13 11:16:20 · answer #8 · answered by wthealer 1 · 0 0

Uh.......If you didn't see the one that was tripped, you didn't "blow a breaker". Sounds like you have some bad wiring goin on. Call an electrician before your house burns down.

2007-03-13 11:13:05 · answer #9 · answered by dracenalady 3 · 1 2

probably on a gfci circuit,check the outlrts for a small bar inbetween where you would plug stuff in,reset the outlet by pressing in on the bar.

2007-03-13 11:35:42 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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