Scary stuff, when you realize what the potential is! We were replacing a 200 amp main breaker the other day, [De-energized] and after removing the one mounting screw, the entire assembly just fell apart. If live, L1,L2 would have been shorting. After doing electrical 30 + yrs, makes you have more respect when you open that panel, exposing the main breaker.
This reminds me of a comment on another electrical work video I saw, "This is for pilots but it also applies to electricians. There are old pilots, and there are bold pilots. But there are no old and bold pilots" (maybe not word for word).
I only worked on residential electrical stuff. I would turn off the breaker in the house fuse box, grab 5:01 one wire with the insulated pliers short it out to make sure I have the right breakers thrown. It had enough spots on it to make a guy really cautious to check everything.
4:05. That last one with the #18 also illustrates why we have rules for feeder taps at ¹/¹⁰ the ampacity of the OCPD on the line side of the tap for the 10 foot tap rule, and ⅓ ampacity of the OCPD line side of tap for the 25 foot tap rule. Not to mention resistance goes up as the conductor heats up reducing the fault current and increasing the clearing time of the OCPD to the point of not providing adequate protection if a short circuit occurs on the tap and the rules are not followed.
My old boss was picking up the crew when one of the workers got in he stunk up the van. Turns out he did a rewire that morning on a 12/2 circuit that shorted with the wrong breaker and melted 30 feet of wire inside the drywall around the room. He bought the wire to show us on the way to work.
Great vidio.Was extreme!y fortunate to have a company that purchased everything except for PPE rated under shirts. Had PPE rated hoodies, & winter rated PPE jackets. Our visors on hard hats had darker green tint.Should mention that rubber & canvas gloves must be sent out every 6 months to be tested & date stamped. Should wear 100% cotton socks ( which I could never find ) & electrical rated work boots good for 1,000 volts ( have no metal eyelets. Always had trouble with every GE garbage 13.2 KV switchgear. Worst was a POS GE 13.2KV dual service outdoor switchgear. It had an ARC flash rating of 120 CAL and moron engineers in training installed vents at eye !evel. ( which guarantees to not only burn your head but blow it off your body ) Was told that any arc fault above 50 cal no matter what approved PPE one would be wearing is guaranteed to kill due to blast would throw you back over 20' .Of course like all GE switchgear it had serious problems within a year with moisture building up and you smell the think produced by high voltage corona. Had to install strip heaters to keep humidity down. Think OSHA requires that you replace all hard hats who very two years but that seldom happens If you need a PPE Hood for high voltage spend the extra money for the style that has a built in cooling fan that runs in 6 AA batteries. Never use fabrics softer on any PPE rated pants shirts or jump suites when you wash the stinky things !
Q for Quinn makes 98% cotton socks but I prefer Darn Tough merino wool work socks because of the lifetime warranty. Also, a company called Woolley makes 100% merino wool underwear as well.
So if I'm understanding electricity properly: the delay in the breaker due to smaller gauge wire is most likely due to current limiting done by the wire. Is that right?
On the last one, what was the flash from the room with the panel? Was an arc flash visible there when the breaker tripped, even though it's a solid black casing?
i think the breaker exceeded the rating of the wire, and by chance, the resistance of the dead-short wasnt enough to pop the breaker, but was still enough to cause melting so the whole length of wire began melting, insulation fell off, and then it began shorting at other points, reducing the resistance and increasing current further, and arcing out of frame if it didnt short itself shorter, it could have been a demo of how a fire starts in walls
I think that was the breaker clearing the dead short. Inside the breaker are a series of plates arranged in a row, like a comb. This provides more surface area to dissipate the arc created inside the breaker when the breaker opens. Search for a video titled MCB, how do they work. It will show the mechanism better than I can describe.
The part he didn't explain is that the wires welded together on the 1st short circuit he created, thus you see no arcs, the current is just going through the wire and you WON'T be able to separate them, then the breaker trips as it should. Why did they weld? Well that is basically how a spot welder works. The short circuit creates a LOT of heat on that spot, enough to melt the copper.
He was bouncing those two ends together and they stuck and welded instantly before he can drop the wire it burned into the gloves a little bit and that whole wire was so hot it made a big long black mark on the floor. If that breaker had hung and not tripped on time that metal would have been white hot in another second.
Well that's cool. I've seen a handful of videos where this accidentally happens I've never seen it on purpose. Just be glad you don't have one of those federal fire pacific breaker panels................. And you're not in the loft of a old restaurant. One of these days I'm going to find that video again.....
This was sort of a stupid exercise. More driven by ego and vanity. Not impressed at all by the silly over-confidence. Pretty dangerous example of things you should not do(intentionally) :(
@@jovetj I won't be so kind to the OP , it is an incredibly stupid thing to do for many reasons: Arc flash, arc damage to customer's walls/floors/etc, if the breaker doesn't trip you will have overheating wire or burning connections upstream, you can easily start a fire in a box with bad connections, and you will also scare the customer and look like a total asshat in front of them. All the companies I ever worked for had the policy that anyone who tries this stunt gets terminated immediately.
Not sure what type of wire was used, but if it was thhn meant for in conduit then you'd be looking at 75c rating of 18A so appropriate breaker would be 15A; they had it on a 60A breaker which means the breaker will require a larger surge before it trips. The appropriate 15A breaker should have prevented the wire from melting.
@@jaybadass2318 Sparks of shorting little wires together is not an arc of electricity flowing through the air. An arc flash (specifically the light) is electricity flowing openly through the air. AKA just like lightning.
Scary stuff, when you realize what the potential is! We were replacing a 200 amp main breaker the other day, [De-energized] and after removing the one mounting screw, the entire assembly just fell apart. If live, L1,L2 would have been shorting. After doing electrical 30 + yrs, makes you have more respect when you open that panel, exposing the main breaker.
@@Twitchy-IdjitNobody cares about your opinion.*
This reminds me of a comment on another electrical work video I saw, "This is for pilots but it also applies to electricians. There are old pilots, and there are bold pilots. But there are no old and bold pilots" (maybe not word for word).
I only worked on residential electrical stuff. I would turn off the breaker in the house fuse box, grab 5:01 one wire with the insulated pliers short it out to make sure I have the right breakers thrown. It had enough spots on it to make a guy really cautious to check everything.
4:05. That last one with the #18 also illustrates why we have rules for feeder taps at ¹/¹⁰ the ampacity of the OCPD on the line side of the tap for the 10 foot tap rule, and ⅓ ampacity of the OCPD line side of tap for the 25 foot tap rule. Not to mention resistance goes up as the conductor heats up reducing the fault current and increasing the clearing time of the OCPD to the point of not providing adequate protection if a short circuit occurs on the tap and the rules are not followed.
Like you, I always at least look away while throwing a switch. Even as I type this, I blink for each keystroke.
😂
My old boss was picking up the crew when one of the workers got in he stunk up the van. Turns out he did a rewire that morning on a 12/2 circuit that shorted with the wrong breaker and melted 30 feet of wire inside the drywall around the room. He bought the wire to show us on the way to work.
😮 Love that he took it as a learning opportunity for everyone else!
Great vidio.Was extreme!y fortunate to have a company that purchased everything except for PPE rated under shirts. Had PPE rated hoodies, & winter rated PPE jackets. Our visors on hard hats had darker green tint.Should mention that rubber & canvas gloves must be sent out every 6 months to be tested & date stamped. Should wear 100% cotton socks ( which I could never find ) & electrical rated work boots good for 1,000 volts ( have no metal eyelets. Always had trouble with every GE garbage 13.2 KV switchgear. Worst was a POS GE 13.2KV dual service outdoor switchgear. It had an ARC flash rating of 120 CAL and moron engineers in training installed vents at eye !evel. ( which guarantees to not only burn your head but blow it off your body ) Was told that any arc fault above 50 cal no matter what approved PPE one would be wearing is guaranteed to kill due to blast would throw you back over 20' .Of course like all GE switchgear it had serious problems within a year with moisture building up and you smell the think produced by high voltage corona. Had to install strip heaters to keep humidity down. Think OSHA requires that you replace all hard hats who very two years but that seldom happens If you need a PPE Hood for high voltage spend the extra money for the style that has a built in cooling fan that runs in 6 AA batteries. Never use fabrics softer on any PPE rated pants shirts or jump suites when you wash the stinky things !
Q for Quinn makes 98% cotton socks but I prefer Darn Tough merino wool work socks because of the lifetime warranty. Also, a company called Woolley makes 100% merino wool underwear as well.
So if I'm understanding electricity properly: the delay in the breaker due to smaller gauge wire is most likely due to current limiting done by the wire. Is that right?
Bingo!
Holy crap
Just remember: short circuits still always make a circuit breaker (or fuse) trip the fastest. Overloads can be a lot slower.
very cool, going to show this in class
On the last one, what was the flash from the room with the panel? Was an arc flash visible there when the breaker tripped, even though it's a solid black casing?
i think the breaker exceeded the rating of the wire, and by chance, the resistance of the dead-short wasnt enough to pop the breaker, but was still enough to cause melting
so the whole length of wire began melting, insulation fell off, and then it began shorting at other points, reducing the resistance and increasing current further, and arcing out of frame
if it didnt short itself shorter, it could have been a demo of how a fire starts in walls
I think that was the breaker clearing the dead short. Inside the breaker are a series of plates arranged in a row, like a comb. This provides more surface area to dissipate the arc created inside the breaker when the breaker opens. Search for a video titled MCB, how do they work. It will show the mechanism better than I can describe.
Not an electrician but I'm curious, care to explain what is exactly going on at 3:17 onward?
The part he didn't explain is that the wires welded together on the 1st short circuit he created, thus you see no arcs, the current is just going through the wire and you WON'T be able to separate them, then the breaker trips as it should.
Why did they weld? Well that is basically how a spot welder works. The short circuit creates a LOT of heat on that spot, enough to melt the copper.
He was bouncing those two ends together and they stuck and welded instantly before he can drop the wire it burned into the gloves a little bit and that whole wire was so hot it made a big long black mark on the floor. If that breaker had hung and not tripped on time that metal would have been white hot in another second.
Wow absolutely SCARY😮
Gotta love arc flash...30,000 F, bus bars turned into plasma. No time to duck. Game on!!
need to try this with longer pieces/smaller sizes of wire
How does the buss bar look. Did it spit out a chunk?
Well that's cool. I've seen a handful of videos where this accidentally happens I've never seen it on purpose. Just be glad you don't have one of those federal fire pacific breaker panels................. And you're not in the loft of a old restaurant.
One of these days I'm going to find that video again.....
You need to get together with Electroboom...
Having flashbacks (pun intended) to watching someone identify what breaker a receptacle was on by jabbing a wire into both slots.
I wouldn't rely on the face shield if you are going to turn your head to the side when you need it to protect you..I could be wrong..
Where can I buy the sweat control gloves?
amzn.to/47TPtwo
You should do that with 480 volts next
Cool video, although the audio seems to have some issues.
Wow. Try higher temp sheathing wire. Boom
This was sort of a stupid exercise. More driven by ego and vanity. Not impressed at all by the silly over-confidence. Pretty dangerous example of things you should not do(intentionally) :(
Look like a teaspoon and boots would have been enough PPE for that one.
😂
I arc wires in homes just to trip the breaker so i dont have to find it lol
I can neither confirm, nor deny, that I know what you're talking about 😏
Not really the best practice.
@@jovetj I won't be so kind to the OP , it is an incredibly stupid thing to do for many reasons: Arc flash, arc damage to customer's walls/floors/etc, if the breaker doesn't trip you will have overheating wire or burning connections upstream, you can easily start a fire in a box with bad connections, and you will also scare the customer and look like a total asshat in front of them. All the companies I ever worked for had the policy that anyone who tries this stunt gets terminated immediately.
Arc flashes are not a problem IF you wear SPF 30 sun tan lotion, then you're fully protected at all times.
😂 Spoken like a true electrician!
Revisiting this for another good laugh! Thank you!
Awesome. I jumped even though I know it can't get me. They need to work on wire that won't melt.
Not sure what type of wire was used, but if it was thhn meant for in conduit then you'd be looking at 75c rating of 18A so appropriate breaker would be 15A; they had it on a 60A breaker which means the breaker will require a larger surge before it trips. The appropriate 15A breaker should have prevented the wire from melting.
Does your wife know what you do at work?
you didn't need all that protective clothes for 60 amps
100cal is better
Honestly none of that is that bad... grow some balls
That was not an arc flash my friend, nice try
Exactly!
I think it’s more among the lines of a short circuit ? Correct me if am wrong 🤔.
@@jaybadass2318 Sparks of shorting little wires together is not an arc of electricity flowing through the air.
An arc flash (specifically the light) is electricity flowing openly through the air. AKA just like lightning.