I’m in an apt. and the power has been shutting off lately. It doesn’t trip any of the breakers in the breaker box inside the apt. but it does trip the master breaker on the box outside. Thought it was an oven issue but it still happens with the oven breaker off.

Visual inspection of the breaker box outside shows one of the wires looks a bit corroded. Wires to/from the rest of the units are a nice copper color. Is that a red flag?

Landlord is dragging their feet and telling us to talk to the electric company, and electric company is saying to call a licensed electrician, so I’m just trying to understand the issue so hopefully the landlord will listen to me.

  • reallykindasorta@slrpnk.netOP
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    3 days ago

    We only have like 5 outlets in the house, would it be okay to put gfci adapters on all of them and plug extensions into the adapters?

    • Septimaeus@infosec.pub
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      3 days ago

      Damn that’s convenient!

      Yes, the simplest adapter style is a chunky wall wart, usually cheapest. Otherwise inline modules are common. For either, you just plug them in between the plug and its outlet and press the “reset” button. 15-amp 125v example from a common US supermarket ($14).

      And if by extender you mean the multi-outlet strip extenders: yes, the adapter+extender would isolate the fault to just that strip. If ground fault occurs, everything on that strip turns off. You can also find power strips with built-in GFCI.

      The only additional consideration re: which GFCI adapters you will need are

      1. Voltage and amperage rating: you can just copy the rating of the outlet’s breaker

      Where to find markings of circuit breaker rating

      …or, if it’s just handling one appliance, take a picture of the power specification, usually a sticker on the back of the appliance, which should give you minimum amperage rating of GFCI

      example of appliance rating sticker

      1. Socket type: if you’re in the US, likely all type B or maybe one or two type I (large 220V appliances) from this chart:

      Most common international plug connector types

      Edit: pictures

      • reallykindasorta@slrpnk.netOP
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        3 days ago

        Excellent, I will grab a couple that will be especially helpful for the kitchen where we occasionally accidentally run the microwave at the same time as the kettle.

        I’ll still prod the landlord to have someone come look at the power main issue.

        • Septimaeus@infosec.pub
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          3 days ago

          That’s great. And glad youre pressing landlord. They’re very likely obligated to cover expenses related to this, but I understand landlords are shitheads and a PITA.

          Just to be clear, re: MW+kettle example, typical GFCI won’t prevent that overload. Circuit breaker should trip. There is a similar component that does both (AFCI) but it’s more expensive and shouldn’t be needed if your breaker is functioning correctly. Adding GFCI is usually inexpensive enough to justify but is only meant to protect against faults, not overloads.