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karkalec

electrical outlet not working (but has power)

karkalec
14 years ago

I have an outlet I run my microwave on. Just now I started the micro, heard a kind of fizzling noise that sounded like it came from the outlet, and the microwave went dead. I have a little voltage detector thingy with two prongs and a little light bulb. The light lights up, indicating electricity, but the microwave and other appliances I try in the outlet do not power up.

Any ideas?

Thanks,

Justin

Comments (20)

  • brickeyee
    14 years ago

    Turn of the circuit breaker for the outlet and remove the plate and receptacle.

    One of the wires attached to the receptacle is probably loose.

    The current from a simple tester like you have is very small, but almost any appliance is much higher.

    A wire that is simply touching may easily carry enough current to light the tester, yet heat up enough to open when a larger load is connected.

  • jake2007
    14 years ago

    I agree.. and you will probably find that the wire is inserted in the back of the outlet instead of using the screws.

    Replace the outlet and use the screws this time.

  • karkalec
    Original Author
    14 years ago

    Thanks a lot for the tips. Actually, I replaced this outlet a couple of months ago already because of the same problem. I replaced it with a side screw version and believe all connections are snug. One thing I'll mention is I tiled the backsplash and have the outlet on those rubber extenders so it kind of wobbles a little. Is it possible a screw touching the metal box is causing this?

    Thanks,

    Justin

  • brickeyee
    14 years ago

    "Is it possible a screw touching the metal box is causing this?"

    If the hot screw touched a grounded metal box the circuit breaker would be tripped and the GFCI also (though the faster one will go first).

    It the neutral touched a grounded metal box the GFCI would trip.

    Check the connections.

    Receptacle screws are tightened more than most folks think to ensure a gas tight connection that does not come loose under repeated thermal cycling as the receptacle heats up and cools down in use.

    If the receptacle is wobbling around you may have worked a wire loose.

    The plastic extension rings that go all the way around the front edge of the box are better than the smaller standoffs that just go on the device screws.

  • karkalec
    Original Author
    14 years ago

    Ok, so the latest is I tightened all the screws and put the outlet back in. The outlet will work for a couple of days, then go out for a day. Today we realized that two other outlets in the same room are also working only occasionally. Does that change the diagnosis? All outlets have been replaced in the last 2 years, so nothing is old.

    Justin

  • kudzu9
    14 years ago

    Have you checked the wiring integrity at each of the malfunctioning receptacles? Sounds like one has a poorly contacting wire that malfunctions as it heats up. This would be the cause of all of the ones downstream from it -- whichever it is -- going out at the same time.

  • karkalec
    Original Author
    14 years ago

    Ok I checked the wires on all of the receptacles. Nothing was obviously loose, but I retightened all of the screws anyway. I noticed on the back of one of the receptacle plates a tiny bit of brown, which seems like it would indicate heat being generated by the outlet, right? Is that a concern or normal?

    So now everything is working, but I'm just waiting to see if they go out again, as they have been on again, off again for a while now.

    By the way, I've seen some mention of GFI being the culprit of dead receptacles, but I have no GFIs that I can find (house is pretty old), and anyway if that was it they wouldn't be functioning intermittently without a reset, right?

    Thanks,

    Justin

  • randy427
    14 years ago

    You might also check the wiring on all of the other devices upstream on that circuit. There may be a loose connection on the output side of a device that would not affect the device itself.

  • karkalec
    Original Author
    14 years ago

    Ok those 3 outlets are now dead again. Upstream receptacles are working. I need to tighten wires on them anyway?

  • kudzu9
    14 years ago

    randy-
    Yes, you need to investigate nearby receptacles that might always be working fine, but could be causing trouble for downstream outlets.

    (P.S.: you're correct re your question about GFCIs)_

  • kudzu9
    14 years ago

    Sorry, I meant to address that to karkelec, not randy...

  • havian_hotmail_com
    13 years ago

    I have a outlet that has low voltage I'm assumming I must have a short somewhere in the line,but how can I find the source of the short.

  • kurto
    13 years ago

    Please create a new thread when you have a new topic.

    If you have a "short" in your circuit, you'll have no voltage at all, and hopefully the circuit breaker has tripped. Low voltage is usually either devices wired in series instead of in parallel, or if very low, it's just a phantom voltage induced from another circuit.

    I'd call an electrician.

  • brickeyee
    13 years ago

    "I have a outlet that has low voltage I'm assumming..."

    Start a new thread please, and notice the first three letters off assuming.

    The first question is what did you measure the voltage with?

  • Steven Loane
    8 years ago

    Are you using a 20 amp wall outlet for your microwave?

  • greg_2015
    8 years ago
    last modified: 8 years ago

    This thread is from 7 years ago. I'm sure they've figured out their problem.

  • Ryan Delaney
    6 years ago

    But I haven't.

  • carol hansen
    2 years ago

    i replaced an outlet in my bathroom but all it will power is a night light nothing that uses more power any ideas

  • kudzu9
    2 years ago

    Caro;-

    I suggest you start your own thread, rather than piggybacking on one that is 11 years old....