How many volts should be on a neutral?

Under load conditions, there should be some neutral-ground voltage - 2 V or a little bit less is pretty typical. If neutral-ground voltage is 0 V - again assuming that there is load on the circuit - then check for a neutral-ground connection in the receptacle, whether accidental or intentional.
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Should there be any voltage on the neutral wire?

The neutral wire is often said to have zero voltage on it. If you touch that wire on a live system, however, you will often find out very quickly that technically having zero voltage is very different from meaning there is no electricity present.
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Why do I have voltage on my neutral wire?

The voltage you are seeing on the neutral wire is conducting through that other load from the hot. Your voltage tester is detecting voltage without drawing current so the resistance of the other load is not seen. Try disconnecting/turning off all other loads on that circuit.
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Why am I getting 120 volts on my neutral?

If you have a neutral wire removed from the neutral bus bar in your panel it is possible to see 120VAC on that wire if the circuit breaker for that circuit is turned on and there is a load connected to the circuit and load device is also turned on.
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Why do I have 80 volts on my neutral?

Check voltage across each conductors. If you read 80V between the hot and neutral, and read 120V between the hot and ground. You have a malfunctioning neutral. If you read 80V between hot and both the neutral and ground your problem is with the hot conductor.
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Checking Voltage from Neutral to Ground



Is there any current in neutral wire?

In a three-phase linear circuit with three identical resistive or reactive loads, the neutral carries no current. The neutral carries current if the loads on each phase are not identical. In some jurisdictions, the neutral is allowed to be reduced in size if no unbalanced current flow is expected.
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Does neutral wire have power?

To summarize: the hot wire carries electricity from the power supply and takes it to the load (lightbulb). Neutral wires take the used electricity from the load and bring it back to the power supply.
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Why is there no neutral on 240 volts?

The grounded (neutral) conductor is connected to the center of the coil (center tap), which is why it provides half the voltage. Therefore, if a device requires only 240V, only two ungrounded (hot) conductors are required to supply the device.
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Can a neutral wire shock?

If you touch the neutral wire in a live circuit, whether it be a lamp, an appliance or something else, it is the same as touching the active wire. It is only "safe" to touch the neutral wire when there is no current flowing, just as it is "safe" to touch the earth wire (when one exists). That is, "safe" is relative.
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How many amps should be on a neutral?

Senior Member. Assuming a 120/240 single phase source, I believe that the neutral current should be the difference between the two ungrounded/hot conductors. If you have 8 amps on A and 6 amps on B, I would have expected 2 amps on the neutral.
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What is the potential of the neutral wire?

The electric potential of the neutral wire in a mains supply cable is Zero volt. That is why it is called neutral wire.
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Why would a neutral wire be hot?

If the neutral is disconnected anywhere between the light bulb and the panel, then the neutral from the light to the point of the break in the neutral will become hot (and the device will be unpowered, because no current will be flowing through it).
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How do you tell if you have a bad neutral wire?

To test a bad neutral simply test the known hot to a good ground. Hot to ground should return nominal voltage ~ 110 - 125 Volts and hot to neutral would read something irregular. In the case the ground is either bad or missing simply run a drop cord from a working properly grounded outlet and test hot to ground.
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How do you test for good neutral?

Set the multimeter to the highest voltage setting in the AC range. Next, hold the black test lead and connect it to the ground wire. Connecting the probe to a grounded appliance or an object also works. Now hold the red probe and touch the exposed wires with it.
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How do you check a neutral wire?

The only way to be absolutely sure that you have found a neutral wire is to check the voltage (110V/120V) between the white wire and the "hot" (usually black in color) wire in the box. In a standard switch/dimmer, the "hot" is using one of the two wires connected to the switch.
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What happens if the live wire touches the neutral wire?

In an electric iron being used in a household, the plastic insulation of live wire and neutral wire in the connecting cable gets torn. Due to this, naked live wire touches the naked neutral wire directly and the electric fuse of the circuit blows off.
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How does a neutral have current but no voltage?

Current flow just requires a voltage difference. As long as the "live" cable has a positive or negative voltage relative to to the neutral cable, current will flow. Voltage is not an absolute value, but a relative one. There is no such thing as 0 volts in an absolute sense.
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What happens if neutral is not grounded?

Grounding neutral provides a common reference for all things plugged into the power system. That makes connections between devices safe(r). 2. Without a ground, static electricity will build up to the point where arcing will occur in the switchgear causing significant loss in transmitted power, overheating, fires etc.
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Should a neutral wire be live?

Neutral is not necessarily zero and assuming it is will likely get you electrocuted. The general idea is that live supplies the voltage and neutral is the return wire. In most installations the live is at the required voltage and the neutral line is connected to ground at some point (so zero volts relative to ground).
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Will I get electrocuted if I touch the neutral wire?

Now, we know that neutral is always connected to the ground or earth. So when touching the neutral wire standing on the ground there is no voltage applied to our body, therefore no current flow through our body and we do not get the electric shock.
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Does neutral carry current in single phase?

In single-phase, loads the neutral wire provides the return path for the current, and in balanced 3 phase loads, because they satisfy the above criteria, the currents enter and return through lines creating 0A of out of balance current. So, there is no need for a neutral wire.
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Does 230 volt have a neutral?

Tips on 230-Volt Wiring

One of the big differences between 115V vs 230V wiring is that 230V circuits have two hot conductors instead of one, so the cable should enclose four wires: two hots, which are red and black, a white neutral and a ground, which is bare or green.
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Can neutral be used as ground?

a ground and a neutral are both wires. unless they're tied together with other circuits, and not a 'home run' back to the panel, there is no difference between the two where they both end up on the same bus bar in the box.
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