neutral resistance?menzukii wrote: β28 Dec 2025, 14:51I apologize for my English
I posted that a loose connection on the neutral wire was causing my latency issue. I simply replaced the bimetallic connector that connects my house's power line to the transformer, and the problems were resolved.
My house doesn't have grounded outlets, so it's not a grounding issue.
I think the solution is simpler than it seems. The problem is that even with a loose connection on either the neutral or live wire, the multimeter readings appear normal. My readings were 125-127 V, and the same current flowed between the live and neutral wires without any apparent problems. The wire resistance was also measured.
ggg
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IMPORTANT:
This subforum is for advanced users only. This separate area is for niche or unexpected lag issues such as electromagnetic interference (EMI, EMF, electrical, radiofrequency, etc). Interference of all kinds (wired, wireless, external, internal, environment, bad component) can cause error-correction (ECC) latencies like a bad modem connection, except internally in a circuit. ECC = retransmits = lag. Troubleshooting may require university degree. Your lag issue is likely not EMI.
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IMPORTANT:
This subforum is for advanced users only. This separate area is for niche or unexpected lag issues such as electromagnetic interference (EMI, EMF, electrical, radiofrequency, etc). Interference of all kinds (wired, wireless, external, internal, environment, bad component) can cause error-correction (ECC) latencies like a bad modem connection, except internally in a circuit. ECC = retransmits = lag. Troubleshooting may require university degree. Your lag issue is likely not EMI.
π You Must Read This First Before Submit Post or Submit Reply
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