I think it's unclear. I checked the patent office and the patent for
electricity doesn't say anything about temperature.

On Fri, Jan 4, 2013 at 10:13 AM, Ryan Coleman <ryanjcole at me.com> wrote:
> That is patently OK. people make MISTAKES.
>
> Jesus.
>
>
> On 1/4/2013 9:59 AM, Eric Crist wrote:
>>
>> This is patently false.  The neutral doesn't ever get 'hot.'  In fact, if
>> you look in most electrical panels, the neutral and grounds are often tied
>> together on a bus bar.  The ONLY way you're getting shocked is if your HOT
>> (black or red, usually) is shorted against the grate itself or another part
>> of the HVAC system.
>>
>> -----
>> Eric F Crist
>>
>>
>>
>> On Jan 4, 2013, at 08:52:11, Ryan Coleman <ryanjcole at me.com> wrote:
>>
>>> I agree... you could do a once-over first... turn off the breaker for
>>> that room/outlet group and remove the outlet from the wall box... Check to
>>> see if there's a loose connection or if the ground is intersecting with the
>>> neutral in any way (It's not likely the hot [black] wire that's bad judging
>>> by the intermittent nature)... at least then you've looked at all you can
>>> physically look at...
>>>
>>> Return the outlet to the box, making sure you don't have any crosses or
>>> other concerns and, once battened down, you can flip your breaker back on.
>>>
>>> Of course if you have a fear of high voltage don't do the above work...
>>> or if you aren't feeling completely confident. There is, of course, the
>>> possibility that the wire past the box (in the wall) is the issue and you'll
>>> never find it there.
>>>
>>> In the interim can you plug it into another outlet that is not showing a
>>> ground fault on your tripplite?
>>
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>
>
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-- 
Erik K. Mitchell
erik.mitchell at gmail.com