Electrical – Why does one leg of the panel drop to 0v and the other rise to 240v when a load is connected

electrical

I have red/black/white cable coming into barn to breaker box from main panel at house. With a tester to neutral bar each leg reads 120v and if two hot legs are tested, 240v.

I have a 20 amp breaker that goes to a timer that control a series of lights. When I turn on breaker for the lights, which are wired correctly, one hot leg drops to 0v and the other leg reads 240v when tested to neutral bar.

I have another breaker to outlet plug that reads fine until I energize the breaker for timer then it too loses voltage because of timer motor somehow shifting all volts to other leg. I've replaced timer with new brand new timer / replaced breaker with new one. I've even run extension cord to lights directly and bypassing breaker box and they work fine if timer/breaker box is bypassed.

Any suggestions where to look?

Best Answer

It sounds like you have a loose, broken, or disconnected neutral at some point.

Double check all terminations are tight, and contact the conductor, not the insulation.

Also check that you have the correct earthing/bonding methods. Do you have an earth/ground wire back to the house?

If so, you need a separate earth and neutral bar, with each wire connected to the correct bar, and no link between them.

If not, you need an earth electrode connected to the earth bar, the incoming neutral connected to the neutral bar, and a link between the two.*

* I believe the NEC no longer allows this approach; I'm not familiar with US code. It may be grandfathered in.