Mike's Home Inspector Blog
Helpful articles from an experienced Home Inspector based in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
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As a home inspector, I don’t have a problem with homeowners being handy. Painting, replacing fixtures, even basic repairs: those can be great DIY projects. Good contractors are booked solid so many homeowners complain about how getting a contractor to commit to a job in Halifax in the year 2026 is like nailing Jell-O to the wall. Electrical work is different. One of the most common and most dangerous mistakes I see (luckily mostly from other home inspectors or electricians) comes from well-intentioned DIY electrical work that throws a home’s electrical system out of balance, particularly when it comes to the two 120-volt “legs” that power your house. Most homeowners don’t even realize those legs exist, that is until something goes very wrong. How Residential Power Actually Works (Quick Version) In a typical North American home, you don’t just have “120 volts.” You have single phase power from two separate legs, which means:
What Happens When the Legs Aren’t Balanced
When the two 120-volt legs are not balanced properly, bad things can happen, quietly at first. 1. Overloaded Neutrals Instead of carrying a small difference in current, the neutral can end up carrying more current than it was designed for. I’ve opened panels and found neutrals overheated, discolored, or brittle from years of excess load. That’s a fire risk hiding in plain sight. 2. Voltage Fluctuations Throughout the House An unbalanced system can cause one leg to run high voltage and the other low voltage. That’s when homeowners start reporting:
3. Damage to Appliances and Electronics Modern appliances and electronics expect stable voltage. When one leg spikes because of an imbalance, components can burn out almost instantly. Refrigerators, HVAC controls, and entertainment systems can suddenly fail for reasons that trace back to improper DIY wiring. 4. Breakers That Don’t Trip When They Should An overloaded neutral or improperly shared circuit doesn’t always trip a breaker. That gives homeowners a false sense of safety: everything “works,” until it doesn’t. Why This Is Hard to DIY Safely The biggest problem with DIY electrical work isn’t effort—it’s invisible complexity. You can’t see:
What I Look For During Inspections When I suspect DIY electrical work, I pay close attention to:
The Bottom Line DIY electrical work doesn’t usually fail immediately. It fails later, under load, when conditions are just right. Unbalanced 120-volt legs are a perfect example of how a small, well-meaning change can put stress on your entire electrical system without any obvious warning signs. If you’re planning to add circuits, modify a panel, install a subpanel, or do anything related to electrical, call a licensed electrician. Some mistakes don’t shock you right away and an unbalanced breaker panel is one such example.
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Inside Edge Home Inspections Ltd.
Halifax, NS 902-209-9921 [email protected] Proudly Serving the HRM & Central Nova Scotia |