I was helping my parents out with their house after a fuse blew. They didn't know what happened, but power went out in parts of the house, but not all. An electric dryer and a Tesla Mobile Connector were running at the same time. Possibly a few other things like a hot water kettle. They're not all on the same glass fuses or circuit breakers, but they're all fed by a set of 60A K5 fuses. The house is pretty old and this was how it was set up even after breakers were installed for an addition. But the entire house electricity goes through one of these 60A fuses.
But it was odd. The best I could tell, none of the breakers tripped and maybe one of the glass fuses blew, or more accurately a mini-breaker I installed for them because that circuit had a tendency to be overloaded. It's just the way it was set up, which was before microwave ovens, hot water kettles, etc. They sometimes forget that they can't run everything at the same time.
I first checked the dryer. It was still getting power (lights on) but wouldn't start. Thought maybe it could be another blown thermal fuse. Checked the breakers and they were intact. Then went to the main fuse box and could immediately tell a fuse was gone by the smell. Pulled it out and it was on old Buss NON-60. When I took it out the fuse was all loose and I pulled it apart and saw the fuse mechanism after pouring out the sand. I guess it's supposed to prevent it from catching on fire once it blows. Also saw it had three notched parts of the ribbon, so each one presents an opportunity to blow if the other fails to blow. Went to HD, got a new set of fuses since the others were all really old (When did Eagle go out of business and when was the last time those cost 60 cents?). Everything started up fine, and lesson learned about running everything at one time.
So what was the deal with the dryer? I was surprised that it still had the lights on but couldn't start.
But it was odd. The best I could tell, none of the breakers tripped and maybe one of the glass fuses blew, or more accurately a mini-breaker I installed for them because that circuit had a tendency to be overloaded. It's just the way it was set up, which was before microwave ovens, hot water kettles, etc. They sometimes forget that they can't run everything at the same time.
I first checked the dryer. It was still getting power (lights on) but wouldn't start. Thought maybe it could be another blown thermal fuse. Checked the breakers and they were intact. Then went to the main fuse box and could immediately tell a fuse was gone by the smell. Pulled it out and it was on old Buss NON-60. When I took it out the fuse was all loose and I pulled it apart and saw the fuse mechanism after pouring out the sand. I guess it's supposed to prevent it from catching on fire once it blows. Also saw it had three notched parts of the ribbon, so each one presents an opportunity to blow if the other fails to blow. Went to HD, got a new set of fuses since the others were all really old (When did Eagle go out of business and when was the last time those cost 60 cents?). Everything started up fine, and lesson learned about running everything at one time.
So what was the deal with the dryer? I was surprised that it still had the lights on but couldn't start.