I recently discovered that an electrical outlet in my attic somehow had two separate electrical circuits running to it. By this, I mean two circuits on two separate breakers running to the same outlet. My inspector was testing the outlet, and when he tripped the GFCI and then pressed the reset button, the outlet made a spark and the breaker powering the whole sub-panel to my home tripped.
My home builder's electrician came out to fix the issue, and what he did was disconnect one circuit, cap the ends, and then tucked them into the outlet.
Through this whole process I discovered that the circuit feeding my furnace is also powering the attic outlet mentioned above, attic lights, the lights in my utility room, and one outlet in my utility room. Is this up to code? Should the furnace unit in my attic be on its own dedicated circuit?
By "furnace unit" I mean the actual furnace and air handler/coil unit for the A/C which are in my attic.
For reference, below are pics of the breakers connected to the circuits mentioned above.
My home builder's electrician came out to fix the issue, and what he did was disconnect one circuit, cap the ends, and then tucked them into the outlet.
Through this whole process I discovered that the circuit feeding my furnace is also powering the attic outlet mentioned above, attic lights, the lights in my utility room, and one outlet in my utility room. Is this up to code? Should the furnace unit in my attic be on its own dedicated circuit?
By "furnace unit" I mean the actual furnace and air handler/coil unit for the A/C which are in my attic.
For reference, below are pics of the breakers connected to the circuits mentioned above.