- Joined
- Apr 2, 2011
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1) Circuit breakers replaced fuse boxes (in homes) in the late 70's and early 80's. You won't see a modern house with a fuse box.
2) Replacing a breaker is easy. As others have said, turn off the largest breaker (main line for the house). Wait for several minutes until any remaining charges have leaked to ground. Then pull old breaker, insert new breaker, turn system back on and test circuit.
3) What you are describing is transient surges in the system. The PSU draws a large load initially to charge capacitors. Once charged these capacitors take almost nothing to maintain. The initial surge is tripping the system. Cheapest solution is outlet (check to see if it is wired properly), breaker, electrician.
4) Label your circuit breaker box when you replace the circuit breaker. What I mean is to reactivate the breakers one at a time, and map where the power comes back on. This will help you determine which outlets belong to which breaker. I've seen more than one bass ackwards wiring job where a bathroom and bedroom were on the same breaker. The regs. might say one thing, but the inspectors generally have that good old boys network with local wiring firms. I wish this were an exageration...
5) Faulty wiring is generally a problem on older houses. That would be the most expensive, and last, place to look for a problem.
2) Replacing a breaker is easy. As others have said, turn off the largest breaker (main line for the house). Wait for several minutes until any remaining charges have leaked to ground. Then pull old breaker, insert new breaker, turn system back on and test circuit.
3) What you are describing is transient surges in the system. The PSU draws a large load initially to charge capacitors. Once charged these capacitors take almost nothing to maintain. The initial surge is tripping the system. Cheapest solution is outlet (check to see if it is wired properly), breaker, electrician.
4) Label your circuit breaker box when you replace the circuit breaker. What I mean is to reactivate the breakers one at a time, and map where the power comes back on. This will help you determine which outlets belong to which breaker. I've seen more than one bass ackwards wiring job where a bathroom and bedroom were on the same breaker. The regs. might say one thing, but the inspectors generally have that good old boys network with local wiring firms. I wish this were an exageration...
5) Faulty wiring is generally a problem on older houses. That would be the most expensive, and last, place to look for a problem.