Today we had lights flickering, odd brown outs, and power surges. Problems would come and go. Called our power company. The man they sent determined we had lost our connection to the neutral.
Before calling, I tried my hand at determining if it was something in the house. Discovered a really odd symptom. The lights in the kitchen would be flickering, but when I turned on the basement lights, the kitchen lights would stop flickering. That's when I realized it was over my head. When I learned to wire ACs 40 years ago, increasing load shouldn't improve load on another circuit.
Any idea why that would happen? If I have another problem brewing, I'd like to know and get it fixed before it becomes something.
Both are on the old panel from the 80's. As we can afford, we're moving things to the new panel. The basement lights are fluorescent and one ballast probably needs replacing. The kitchen lights are screw in LEDs.
Thanks
Update: Am satisfied with the answer. Thanks. And dimmers are way too high tech for this place. (Don't let it know about the WiFi.)
I know I have a lost neutral > explain weird symptoms though .... when you have a lost neutral, your house will be wall-to-wall weird symptoms. Therefore no symptom is meaningful until the lost neutral is fixed. This is made worse by the fact that many people go days or even weeks before discovering that they have a lost neutral. My sweetie said "Sorry the toast is taking so long, the toaster has been slow all week!" I was up out of my chair instantly looking for a voltmeter, point is, it took that long for anyone in our complex to even notice.
– Harper - Reinstate Monica Oct 23 '20 at 14:55