murphy1244
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Have you used this outlet before?

I agree with the electrician (imagine that)Yes time to carefully take the cover off, and start checking for voltages inside.. Remember your 245 volts will fry you nice and crispy. But that is what I would do. This will tell you if there is a connection problem in the plug or cord with and intermittent connection perhaps. Just be careful, keep one hand in your pocket and think through each step. Unplug from the wall if you need to disassemble further or re-position your leads to measure. Also not a bad idea to have another responsible adult nearby, no kids no pets in the area.
I know, I know I am being a nanny here, but if you are not used to working with high voltage/high current circuits, better safe than sorry.
By the way the fan in those is fairly loud, You are darn sure going to hear it when you switch it on.
I see three black wires entering the box. One is a ground and goes to a wire nut, allong with a bare copper wire that goes to the box screw, and another short black wire that goes to the outlet ground connection.well I see both hot wires from the outlet connecting to a single incoming wire. In other words there's two outlets connected on with one incoming wire so is three wires under one wire nut. There's no way in the world you can have 240 that way I'm not sure how you're reading it.
I've tried welding on DC+/- and AC with no luck.. I'm going to call the shop tomorrow and see what they say, I will also try to test it at a friends place to see if there is something weird with my supply.
learning to weld may be the easier part
and keep an eye out for auto darkening helmet. its amazing how much weld quality increases in relation to good helmet
I originally tried doing this, I hooked each probe one to each hot and plugged the cord in as far as I could, I only read 60V across them, the switch was on if I remember. I just assumed this was because they prongs were not making a good enough connection, could this be an issue?
I originally tried doing this, I hooked each probe one to each hot and plugged the cord in as far as I could, I only read 60V across them, the switch was on if I remember. I just assumed this was because they prongs were not making a good enough connection, could this be an issue?
I never asked if you were using a Digital or Analogue meter. Sometimes you can get erroneous readings with a digital meter. I was working in a factory last summer doing my security stuff when their in house electrician was getting all flustered. He kept getting voltage on a line that he was sure he turned off. I noticed immediately that another circuit occupied the same conduit. I told him to shut that one off as well and as I expected, his readings went away! He seemed so dumbfounded by it all (the induced voltages that is) and I couldn't believe he had been an industrial electrician for decades!
As for your issue. I would be trying to put another load on that receptacle, or at least take an old (edison) light bulb and put the leads into or onto the receptacle live to ground, each side, not accross both or your bulb will POP.