Question on home electric problem - lights flickering only in certain rooms

nisryus

Senior member
Sep 11, 2007
752
135
106
So a few days ago the lights inside the master bedroom and bathroom start to flicker. I first thought it might be related to the AC, as i it draws power when it starts. But nope, it was not during the time the AC started up. Also when all of the lights in either rooms started to flicker, everywhere else around the house was fine.

The flickering happens randomly. Sometimes in the afternoon, early morning, or late at night.

Could this be a loose connection somewhere in the circuit? I checked the outlets and all seemed fine and have good voltage. Could it be bad fuse in the electrical panel?

*Hope its not ghost!!!
 

mindless1

Diamond Member
Aug 11, 2001
8,193
1,495
126
Yes it could be loose wiring, try to narrow down what elements of the circuit are common to both rooms, perhaps the same fuse or breaker. You can take fuses or breakers out and clean the contacts, and swap with other fuses or breakers.

Do not electrocute yourself, only do what you are comfortable doing safely. Since a wiring problem potentially poses a fire hazard, I wouldn't let this go on for long before calling an electrician.
 

iRONic

Diamond Member
Jan 28, 2006
7,130
2,431
136
Ohman... if you're asking that here instead of watching relevant You tube info, ask a local pro on Angi.
 

nisryus

Senior member
Sep 11, 2007
752
135
106
Mentioned to wife if i could check for loose connections, she immediately told me to find an electrican...
 

herm0016

Diamond Member
Feb 26, 2005
8,421
1,049
126
Mentioned to wife if i could check for loose connections, she immediately told me to find an electrician...

as an electrician, good advice. if you don't know what's going on in a panel, its best to leave it to a pro. most common issue is loose connections. when ever i go into a panel I do what we call a "tune up" make sure everything looks proper, check connection tightness on everything with insulated tools.
 
Reactions: iRONic and Paperdoc

Paperdoc

Platinum Member
Aug 17, 2006
2,320
285
126
Yes, this is a bad connection somewhere. The fact that this happens in both rooms simultaneously says that BOTH of those are on the same circuit. Tracking down the location and fixing it is not simple because what you want to find is NOT likely obvious to the eye. Further, it may not be obviously "loose", either. A SLIGHTLY loose connection can develop oxidation over time and result in intermittent contact giving these symptoms.

If you can trace the sequence of where cables in the circuit go, from beaker panel all the way to the end, you can start to find the location. If you can identify WHERE in the sequence the problem happens, then the poor connection is just AT OR BEFORE that point. That MIGHT be in the breaker panel, or anywhere along the circuit.

You REALLY need some expertise to do any of this with a live circuit, and doing in on a isolated circuit with the breaker turned off is tough. The intermittent nature of this increases the difficulty. A pro should know how to do. He / she might even come with a thermal scanner to look for a "hot" (well, really somewhat warmer than normal) spot in junction boxes.
 
Reactions: iRONic

Greenman

Lifer
Oct 15, 1999
20,642
5,329
136
Yes, this is a bad connection somewhere. The fact that this happens in both rooms simultaneously says that BOTH of those are on the same circuit. Tracking down the location and fixing it is not simple because what you want to find is NOT likely obvious to the eye. Further, it may not be obviously "loose", either. A SLIGHTLY loose connection can develop oxidation over time and result in intermittent contact giving these symptoms.

If you can trace the sequence of where cables in the circuit go, from beaker panel all the way to the end, you can start to find the location. If you can identify WHERE in the sequence the problem happens, then the poor connection is just AT OR BEFORE that point. That MIGHT be in the breaker panel, or anywhere along the circuit.

You REALLY need some expertise to do any of this with a live circuit, and doing in on a isolated circuit with the breaker turned off is tough. The intermittent nature of this increases the difficulty. A pro should know how to do. He / she might even come with a thermal scanner to look for a "hot" (well, really somewhat warmer than normal) spot in junction boxes.
And all of that can be complicated if someone put a junction box in the attic and it was covered with insulation. Or worse, just wire nutted the wires together inside the wall. I've found that two or three times demoing for a remodel.
 

iRONic

Diamond Member
Jan 28, 2006
7,130
2,431
136
Mentioned to wife if i could check for loose connections, she immediately told me to find an electrican...
Do you own a multimeter and some insulated hand tools? Are you comfortable using basic electric theory & circuitry? If not, listen to your wife.
 
Reactions: nisryus

PowerEngineer

Diamond Member
Oct 22, 2001
3,558
735
136
Yes, this is likely a loose connection somewhere. As Mindless correctly warns, it could be a serious fire hazard. I would identify the circuit breaker feeding the misbehaving lights and leave it open for the time being.

While not knowing how old this house and its wiring might be, it appears (at least in my limited experience) that newer homes tend to have wall outlets and ceiling light fixtures on separate circuit breakers. You can easily see if this is the case in your house, and if so then use plug-in lamps in those rooms as an interim measure.
 
Reactions: Paperdoc
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