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Default Have I Found It!

I have a separate garage that has power supplied from my house RCD equipped
CU. In the garage there is a separate two way CU (lights and sockets). The
sockets in the garage are all twin plastic apart from one twin metalclad, a
total of 4 twins outlets. They are all daisychained off the previous one
i.e. ----Feed from
house----[CU]-----[Skt]--------[Skt]-------[Skt]-----[Skt]. These were all
in when we moved in.

I have lived here for 12 years and over the last couple of months the garage
MCB in the house has tripped intermittently. The only thing in the garage
that is permanently plugged in is a freezer (and it has been for 9+ years).
I tried plugging the freezer into different sockets to try to eliminate it's
'normal' socket but it still kept tripping. Today I plugged in my socket
tester and found one socket didn't have an earth, this socket isn't the
freezer's normal socket. I traced this back to the previous socket and
reattached the earth wire. I then looked inside the freezer's plug top and
found the live conductor was loose. The copper strands were still inside
the hole but the screw wasn't tight. The plug top has never been apart
before so either it was supplied like this from new or it has worked loose.
I have now tightened this up. Neither of the loose wires were able to touch
any other conductors.

My question is am I likely to have found the problem? I can keep checking
but this means me having to stick my head in a cupboard and cricking my
neck. I will check periodically but have I sorted it? I can also check on
most days when I go in the garage and switch the lights on.

Cheers

John

PS. Thanks Geoff the stamps are in the post tomorrow.


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Default Have I Found It!

John brought next idea :
My question is am I likely to have found the problem? I can keep checking
but this means me having to stick my head in a cupboard and cricking my neck.
I will check periodically but have I sorted it? I can also check on most
days when I go in the garage and switch the lights on.


Probably not. You can get freezer supply failure alarms. Could you
perhaps plug one of these into a socket, so that you would know when it
tripped? It might offer some clues as to when it is tripping.

--
Regards,
Harry (M1BYT) (L)
http://www.ukradioamateur.co.uk


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Default Have I Found It!


"Harry Bloomfield" wrote in message
. uk...
John brought next idea :
My question is am I likely to have found the problem? I can keep
checking but this means me having to stick my head in a cupboard and
cricking my neck. I will check periodically but have I sorted it? I can
also check on most days when I go in the garage and switch the lights on.


Probably not. You can get freezer supply failure alarms. Could you perhaps
plug one of these into a socket, so that you would know when it tripped?
It might offer some clues as to when it is tripping.


Thanks for the info but knowing when it has tripped won't tell me what is
causing it to trip. As I said in my OP the freezer is the only thing
constantly plugged in so it is not tripping when something else is calling
for power.

Cheers

John


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Default Have I Found It!


"John" wrote in message
...
I have a separate garage that has power supplied from my house RCD equipped
CU. In the garage there is a separate two way CU (lights and sockets).
The sockets in the garage are all twin plastic apart from one twin
metalclad, a total of 4 twins outlets. They are all daisychained off the
previous one i.e. ----Feed from
house----[CU]-----[Skt]--------[Skt]-------[Skt]-----[Skt]. These were all
in when we moved in.

I have lived here for 12 years and over the last couple of months the
garage MCB in the house has tripped intermittently. The only thing in the
garage that is permanently plugged in is a freezer (and it has been for 9+
years). I tried plugging the freezer into different sockets to try to
eliminate it's 'normal' socket but it still kept tripping. Today I
plugged in my socket tester and found one socket didn't have an earth,
this socket isn't the freezer's normal socket. I traced this back to the
previous socket and reattached the earth wire. I then looked inside the
freezer's plug top and found the live conductor was loose. The copper
strands were still inside the hole but the screw wasn't tight. The plug
top has never been apart before so either it was supplied like this from
new or it has worked loose. I have now tightened this up. Neither of the
loose wires were able to touch any other conductors.

My question is am I likely to have found the problem? I can keep checking
but this means me having to stick my head in a cupboard and cricking my
neck. I will check periodically but have I sorted it? I can also check
on most days when I go in the garage and switch the lights on.

Cheers

John


Is it feasible to run a temp extension cable from the house (different
circuit) to run the freezer, and see if that trips? Also, you can then see
if garage trips when there's no demand on it.

Incidentally, I don't claim to be an expert but 4 twin sockets off one spur
alarms me a bit - are the trips sensibly sized...?

--
Martin

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Default Have I Found It!

John wrote:
John wrote:
"Harry Bloomfield" wrote in message
. uk...
John brought next idea :
My question is am I likely to have found the problem? I can keep
checking but this means me having to stick my head in a cupboard and
cricking my neck. I will check periodically but have I sorted it? I can
also check on most days when I go in the garage and switch the lights on.

Probably not. You can get freezer supply failure alarms. Could you perhaps
plug one of these into a socket, so that you would know when it tripped?
It might offer some clues as to when it is tripping.


Thanks for the info but knowing when it has tripped won't tell me what is
causing it to trip. As I said in my OP the freezer is the only thing
constantly plugged in so it is not tripping when something else is calling
for power.

Cheers

John



"Harry Bloomfield" wrote in message
. uk...
John brought next idea :
My question is am I likely to have found the problem? I can keep
checking but this means me having to stick my head in a cupboard and
cricking my neck. I will check periodically but have I sorted it? I can
also check on most days when I go in the garage and switch the lights on.

Probably not. You can get freezer supply failure alarms. Could you perhaps
plug one of these into a socket, so that you would know when it tripped?
It might offer some clues as to when it is tripping.


Thanks for the info but knowing when it has tripped won't tell me what is
causing it to trip. As I said in my OP the freezer is the only thing
constantly plugged in so it is not tripping when something else is calling
for power.

Cheers

John


Not uncommon for freezers to be a source of leakage so test that.
Connect a low powered mains light bulb in series with the freezer earth
lead. hopefully the bulb will not light but you can measure the voltage
across the bulb. It ought to be zero.
Far better for things like freezers to be powered by a non RCD protected
supply to prevent nuisance defrosting.

hth

Bob


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Default Have I Found It!

"John" wrote in message
...
I have a separate garage that has power supplied from my house RCD equipped
CU. In the garage there is a separate two way CU (lights and sockets).
The sockets in the garage are all twin plastic apart from one twin
metalclad, a total of 4 twins outlets. They are all daisychained off the
previous one i.e. ----Feed from
house----[CU]-----[Skt]--------[Skt]-------[Skt]-----[Skt]. These were all
in when we moved in.

I have lived here for 12 years and over the last couple of months the
garage MCB in the house has tripped intermittently. The only thing in the
garage that is permanently plugged in is a freezer (and it has been for 9+
years). I tried plugging the freezer into different sockets to try to
eliminate it's 'normal' socket but it still kept tripping. Today I
plugged in my socket tester and found one socket didn't have an earth,
this socket isn't the freezer's normal socket. I traced this back to the
previous socket and reattached the earth wire. I then looked inside the
freezer's plug top and found the live conductor was loose. The copper
strands were still inside the hole but the screw wasn't tight. The plug
top has never been apart before so either it was supplied like this from
new or it has worked loose. I have now tightened this up. Neither of the
loose wires were able to touch any other conductors.

My question is am I likely to have found the problem? I can keep checking
but this means me having to stick my head in a cupboard and cricking my
neck. I will check periodically but have I sorted it? I can also check
on most days when I go in the garage and switch the lights on.

Cheers

John

PS. Thanks Geoff the stamps are in the post tomorrow.


My first answer:

If you mean MCB (Miniature Circuit Breaker) and not RCD (Residual Current
Device) then no, you have you not found the fault.

An MCB opens when there is more than a specified current flowing in a
circuit. That could be a traditional overload (too much stuff drawing power
at once) or a short from Live to Neutral or Earth. Neither of your found
faults would have caused this.

MCBs can become faulty so it you have another circuit with an *identical*
MCB (same rating and type) you could try swapping them to aid investigation.


And then after a little more thought my second answer:

I guess if the Live in the plug was loose and making intermittent contact
then it could produce all sorts of spikes on the mains which could upset the
MCB. If the freezer was taking a few amps because it was on a "go" bit of
its cooling cycle and the Live opened then the back emf could be substantial
and I've no idea what the MCB might make of it.


Sorry, each of those two answers would probably have been useful on their
own but together they don't help at all do they!

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Default Have I Found It!

John wrote:
I have a separate garage that has power supplied from my house RCD equipped
CU. In the garage there is a separate two way CU (lights and sockets). The
sockets in the garage are all twin plastic apart from one twin metalclad, a
total of 4 twins outlets. They are all daisychained off the previous one
i.e. ----Feed from
house----[CU]-----[Skt]--------[Skt]-------[Skt]-----[Skt]. These were all
in when we moved in.

I have lived here for 12 years and over the last couple of months the garage
MCB in the house has tripped intermittently.


You mean the RCD is not tripping? so its current overload and not earth
leakage that is happening?


The only thing in the garage
that is permanently plugged in is a freezer (and it has been for 9+ years).
I tried plugging the freezer into different sockets to try to eliminate it's
'normal' socket but it still kept tripping. Today I plugged in my socket
tester and found one socket didn't have an earth, this socket isn't the
freezer's normal socket. I traced this back to the previous socket and
reattached the earth wire. I then looked inside the freezer's plug top and
found the live conductor was loose. The copper strands were still inside
the hole but the screw wasn't tight. The plug top has never been apart
before so either it was supplied like this from new or it has worked loose.
I have now tightened this up. Neither of the loose wires were able to touch
any other conductors.

My question is am I likely to have found the problem?


Probably not.

It is JUST possible that a continuous high current arc was overloading
the MCB, but you would have found evidence of extreme arcing and burning
in the plug.

I can keep checking
but this means me having to stick my head in a cupboard and cricking my
neck. I will check periodically but have I sorted it? I can also check on
most days when I go in the garage and switch the lights on.


Frankly if you are overcurrenting the thing, you have a wiring short or
a faulty freezer, and its likely to go bang sooner or later and take out
the wiring.

Happened to me when I painted a kitchen in a rented house. the paint got
into a hole with a rawlplug in left over from some previous shelf, and
as it happened, the thing had been neatly drilled through a ring main.

The landlord blamed me and refused to give my deposit back when I left.

I got the last laugh though, because my deposit was three months rent in
advance, and then I paid monthly in advance after that. There was no
deposit to give back ;-)
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"John Rumm" wrote in message
...
Martin wrote:

"John" wrote in message
...


I have a separate garage that has power supplied from my house RCD
equipped CU. In the garage there is a separate two way CU (lights and
sockets). The sockets in the garage are all twin plastic apart from one
twin metalclad, a total of 4 twins outlets. They are all daisychained
off the previous one i.e. ----Feed from
house----[CU]-----[Skt]--------[Skt]-------[Skt]-----[Skt]. These were
all in when we moved in.


Incidentally, I don't claim to be an expert but 4 twin sockets off one
spur alarms me a bit - are the trips sensibly sized...?


The circuit in question is a radial - not a spur[1]. With a radial circuit
the cable is sized such that it can safely carry the full circuit load.

Hence there are no restrictions on the number of sockets in can service,
although the suggested maximum floor area served by the circuit is 50m^2.

[1] A spur is a special case of a single cable leaving a ring circuit
where the responsibility for fault and overload protection becomes split
between the protective device at the head end of the circuit providing
just the fault protection, and the selection of equipment on the tail end
enforcing the overload protection - hence the need for specific
limitations on what can go on the end of an unfused spur.


So I was right - I'm not an expert ...!

Many thanks for the explanation, John.

--
Martin




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"John Rumm" wrote in message
o.uk...

Do you actually mean MCB or do you mean the RCD in the house?


Yes it is the individual 16A MCB that is tripping NOT the RCD. The one in
the garage doesn't trip only the one in the house CU. It has only started
happening within the last couple of months we have lived here for 12 years
and the freezer has been in there for 9 years plus (from new). So far
(touch wood) the MCB hasn't tripped since I repaired the two faults
yesterday.


Cheers

John


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"John Rumm" wrote in message
o.uk...
Do you actually mean MCB or do you mean the RCD in the house?

My question is am I likely to have found the problem? I can keep
checking


You have found a problem (well two in fact). But whether they are
connected will depend a bit on the answer to the above.


I have looked again at my house CU and I think I may have lead certain
people up the garden path due to my lack of terminology/knowledge with
regards to MCB's and RCD's.

The CU is 17 years old and is an MK Sentry. The trip switch in question is
actually a RCBO. The details on the breaker a

[Test Button]
[Switch]
RCBO
LN 6930S
16A 30mA
Type 2
240V

I believe the 6930s is the Old MK part number but it now appears to be
superseded by 6934s. Only my house sockets, (1 upstairs and 1 downstairs)
and my garage are protected with this type of RCBO. All other circuits are
just MCB's (2 x 6A, 1 x 16A, 1 x 32A) and a 100A big red switch for
everything.

Cheers

John


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