|
Home > Archive > Home Repair forum > February 2008 > Hum sound from Spa breaker box
You are viewing an archived Text-only version of the thread.
To view this thread in it's original format and/or if you want to reply to
this thread please [click here]
| Author |
Hum sound from Spa breaker box
|
|
|
| I can hear it from inside the house. This GFCI breaker box has been
out there for two years and now it's starting to hum. Should I be
concerned? How to fix?
| |
|
|
"Bryan" <bryan.desilva@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:cf0948d8-7e24-47fb-88e3-ad2d81370c1f@h25g2000hsf.googlegroups.com...
>I can hear it from inside the house. This GFCI breaker box has been
> out there for two years and now it's starting to hum. Should I be
> concerned? How to fix?
If it's a rain tight breaker box with a double pole gfci breaker, you've
likely got a bad breaker. If it's a GFCI protected contactor type spa
disconnect, like the one in the following link, it's likely a buzzing
contactor, which could be from dirt, or corrosion, and probably needs to be
replaced :
http://www.spadepot.com/shop/Spa-Di...r-P696C287.aspx
| |
|
| Thanks! It does look like the one in the link. This is only a couple
of years old. Am I really going to have to replace this entire $140
thing this often? Or is it just a smaller, read 'cheaper', part I can
replace?
Bryan
On Feb 24, 4:10 pm, "RBM" <r...@noemail.com> wrote:
> "Bryan" <bryan.desi...@gmail.com> wrote in message
>
> news:cf0948d8-7e24-47fb-88e3-ad2d81370c1f@h25g2000hsf.googlegroups.com...
>
>
> If it's a rain tight breaker box with a double pole gfci breaker, you've
> likely got a bad breaker. If it's a GFCI protected contactor type spa
> disconnect, like the one in the following link, it's likely a buzzing
> contactor, which could be from dirt, or corrosion, and probably needs to be
> replaced :http://www.spadepot.com/shop/Spa-Di...ter-P696C287...
| |
|
|
"Bryan" <bryan.desilva@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:285ffb4a-20d4-4b65-9f63-1fdc6a3e086e@72g2000hsu.googlegroups.com...
> Thanks! It does look like the one in the link. This is only a couple
> of years old. Am I really going to have to replace this entire $140
> thing this often? Or is it just a smaller, read 'cheaper', part I can
> replace?
>
> Bryan
>
> On Feb 24, 4:10 pm, "RBM" <r...@noemail.com> wrote:
The contactor in the unit,(the thing that's buzzing), has an electromagnetic
coil that pulls the contacts together. If it doesn't seat properly, it will
buzz. Sometimes it's a matter of insect debris, or oxidation causing this.
Kill the power to the unit, open it up, look at it and see if you can clean
it up and stop the buzz. A little WD-40 may help, but don't get it on the
electrical contacts[color=darkred]
>
|
|
|
|
|