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Tabby Tabby is offline
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Default RCD repeatedly tripping

On Apr 7, 1:46*am, "ARWadsworth"
wrote:
Tabby wrote:
On Apr 6, 9:23 pm, "ARWadsworth"
wrote:
Tabby wrote:
On Apr 6, 4:51 pm, Charlie wrote:


Got a call from my tenant saying the "the switch in the fuse box
keeps repeatedly tripping". It was just the main downstairs ring
that was affected, the other circuits and lights were ok. Got her
to unplug all the devices and she said the problem was still there.


As I don't live that close to the property I decided to call an
electrician to have a look. He said that he was not able to
identify the problem but had bypassed the RCD to restore power
temporarily until a permanent fix could be found. He also emailed
me a quote for 600 for two man days work to identify the problem.


I decided to visit the property last night just to make sure I was
happy the tennant and the house was safe. I tested a few of the
sockets with a socket tester and it showed that none of them was
earthed. I also managed to establish that the fridge which is
located in the middle of the kitchen "island" was not receiving
any power.


IIRC when I tiled the kitchen floor there is a spur to the island
from a JB under one of the tiles (don't ask - I didn't want to mess
around with the existing electrics). So maybe there could be
problem with the JB surrounded by tile cement / concrete?


A couple of questions do I have two separate problems here?
1. No power to the kitchen "island"
2. An earthed live or neutral some on the ring (or possibly even an
appliance that wasn't unplugged). I guess it's possible that
there's a spur that we don't know about that something is plugged
into, or a mouse has chewed through a wire


Are the problems are related?
Is the quote from the electrician reasonable?


Any help gratefully received


This is exactly the sort of situation that puts landlords in prison.
Grow up, and provide your tenant with something legal & safe. And do
it now.


To be fair, he phoned an electrician. What more do you want him to
do?


Enter the property at the first possible opportunity and disconnect
the faulty circuit.


That was the electricians job.


It was. The landlord _is_ aware that the installation is now in a
dangerous state, and has a legal responsibility to provide a safe
house. Thus any failure to act and act without delay renders the
landlord liable. Given what appears to be a lack of electrical skills,
an emergency callout is really the only way I can see to remove the
risk to the landlord.


NT