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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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A relative lives in a 300-year-old house. Yesterday he called to warn
that when I visit tomorrow (Friday) it's likely that roughly half the house will still be without power. The other, smaller, half is unaffected. The electrician he called has so far not been able to diagnose the cause of the problem. The half that is out is on a separate "fuse" box. The other half of the house is unaffected. I write "fuse" in quotes, but I understand that it does at least have the switches, not old-fashioned fuse-wire fuses, although the equipment seems to be very old. The electrician, who is fully booked up today, tried for several hours yesterday to pinpoint the cause and thought he had found it. But then the "fuse" (i.e. switch) popped out again later in the afternoon. Does anyone have any comments as to the cause? And how would an electrician go about narrowing down the problem area? According to my relative, the electrician knows what he's doing, i.e. isn't an amateur. How does one trace through all the wiring in the affected side, especially given the age of the property? Thanks. MM |
#2
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On Thursday, 25 July 2019 07:29:51 UTC+1, MM wrote:
A relative lives in a 300-year-old house. Yesterday he called to warn that when I visit tomorrow (Friday) it's likely that roughly half the house will still be without power. The other, smaller, half is unaffected. The electrician he called has so far not been able to diagnose the cause of the problem. The half that is out is on a separate "fuse" box. The other half of the house is unaffected. I write "fuse" in quotes, but I understand that it does at least have the switches, not old-fashioned fuse-wire fuses, although the equipment seems to be very old. The electrician, who is fully booked up today, tried for several hours yesterday to pinpoint the cause and thought he had found it. But then the "fuse" (i.e. switch) popped out again later in the afternoon. Does anyone have any comments as to the cause? And how would an electrician go about narrowing down the problem area? According to my relative, the electrician knows what he's doing, i.e. isn't an amateur. How does one trace through all the wiring in the affected side, especially given the age of the property? Thanks. MM Half the house without power means a whole CU dead, not one final circuit. They're called MCBs btw. If any one MCB tripped you'd only lose one circuit.. You're presumably losing the whole CU, so it sounds like it has an RCD that's tripping. If that's the case, there are 2 tests to do. Insulation test each final circuit, then PAT test or insulation test all your appliances. Usually that will pinpoint the culprit. Sometimes you can find the bad appliance by just insulation testing with a multimeter, one probe on L&N & the other on E plug pin - with the appliance unplugged of course. There should be no conduction there. So you may solve it with a ┬г10 multimeter and an hour. Sometimes the fault is only picked up with high voltage testing. A clear pic of the 'fusebox' would help NT |
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#6
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#7
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Jeff Layman formulated on Thursday :
If an RCD is tripping then the simplest thing to do is switch off all the MCBs, reset the RCD, then switch on each MCB in turn until the RCD trips again. Then you know which circuit is faulty. 50/50 chance at best - it might be an N to E fault. |
#8
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On 25/07/2019 07:30, MM wrote:
A relative lives in a 300-year-old house. Yesterday he called to warn that when I visit tomorrow (Friday) it's likely that roughly half the house will still be without power. The other, smaller, half is unaffected. The electrician he called has so far not been able to diagnose the cause of the problem. The half that is out is on a separate "fuse" box. The other half of the house is unaffected. I write "fuse" in quotes, but I understand that it does at least have the switches, not old-fashioned fuse-wire fuses, although the equipment seems to be very old. That leaves a lot of room for speculation untrammelled by facts ![]() As already noted, pictures might help - ideally of both fuse boxes and of where the cable comes into the house. It might also help to know if the supply to the house is from overhead cables. -- Robin reply-to address is (intended to be) valid |
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#10
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On 25/07/2019 08:43, MM wrote:
snip I gather from what I've been told that the electrical system in the old house is quite ancient, as the electrican stated that after the immediate fault has been rectified, at least temporarily, the whole CU urgently requires replacing. Maybe the wiring, too, which would be an enormous (and costly) job. It's a large house! MM The only thing to look out for (initially) is the presence of rubber coated wiring or those sockets with round pins (except for diddy little lighting ones). If the cables going into the sockets and lighting roses looks like pvc cable then an urgent isolate and rewire is not needed, IMHO. Sparkys OTOH just love to frighten and bull**** clueless owners into expensive rewiring. |
#11
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On 25/07/2019 10:05, Robin wrote:
On 25/07/2019 07:30, MM wrote: A relative lives in a 300-year-old house. Yesterday he called to warn that when I visit tomorrow (Friday) it's likely that roughly half the house will still be without power. The other, smaller, half is unaffected. The electrician he called has so far not been able to diagnose the cause of the problem. The half that is out is on a separate "fuse" box. The other half of the house is unaffected. I write "fuse" in quotes, but I understand that it does at least have the switches, not old-fashioned fuse-wire fuses, although the equipment seems to be very old. That leaves a lot of room for speculation untrammelled by facts ![]() As already noted, pictures might help - ideally of both fuse boxes and of where the cable comes into the house.┬* It might also help to know if the supply to the house is from overhead cables. Or even it it used to two houses, now combined but still with two incomers, main fuses and CU's *(like my bro & SIL's house). |
#12
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On Thu, 25 Jul 2019 11:40:58 +0100, Andrew
wrote: On 25/07/2019 10:05, Robin wrote: On 25/07/2019 07:30, MM wrote: A relative lives in a 300-year-old house. Yesterday he called to warn that when I visit tomorrow (Friday) it's likely that roughly half the house will still be without power. The other, smaller, half is unaffected. The electrician he called has so far not been able to diagnose the cause of the problem. The half that is out is on a separate "fuse" box. The other half of the house is unaffected. I write "fuse" in quotes, but I understand that it does at least have the switches, not old-fashioned fuse-wire fuses, although the equipment seems to be very old. That leaves a lot of room for speculation untrammelled by facts ![]() As already noted, pictures might help - ideally of both fuse boxes and of where the cable comes into the house.* It might also help to know if the supply to the house is from overhead cables. Or even it it used to two houses, now combined but still with two incomers, main fuses and CU's *(like my bro & SIL's house). Yes, I did gather from speaking with my relative that the side of the house that is unaffected has a separate consumer unit. MM |
#13
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#14
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On Thursday, 25 July 2019 08:42:51 UTC+1, MM wrote:
On Wed, 24 Jul 2019 23:45:14 -0700 (PDT), tabbypurr wrote: On Thursday, 25 July 2019 07:29:51 UTC+1, MM wrote: A relative lives in a 300-year-old house. Yesterday he called to warn that when I visit tomorrow (Friday) it's likely that roughly half the house will still be without power. The other, smaller, half is unaffected. The electrician he called has so far not been able to diagnose the cause of the problem. The half that is out is on a separate "fuse" box. The other half of the house is unaffected. I write "fuse" in quotes, but I understand that it does at least have the switches, not old-fashioned fuse-wire fuses, although the equipment seems to be very old. The electrician, who is fully booked up today, tried for several hours yesterday to pinpoint the cause and thought he had found it. But then the "fuse" (i.e. switch) popped out again later in the afternoon. Does anyone have any comments as to the cause? And how would an electrician go about narrowing down the problem area? According to my relative, the electrician knows what he's doing, i.e. isn't an amateur. How does one trace through all the wiring in the affected side, especially given the age of the property? Thanks. MM Half the house without power means a whole CU dead, not one final circuit. They're called MCBs btw. If any one MCB tripped you'd only lose one circuit. You're presumably losing the whole CU, so it sounds like it has an RCD that's tripping. If that's the case, there are 2 tests to do. Insulation test each final circuit, then PAT test or insulation test all your appliances. Usually that will pinpoint the culprit. Sometimes you can find the bad appliance by just insulation testing with a multimeter, one probe on L&N & the other on E plug pin - with the appliance unplugged of course. There should be no conduction there. So you may solve it with a ┬г10 multimeter and an hour. Sometimes the fault is only picked up with high voltage testing. A clear pic of the 'fusebox' would help Thanks. I'll take a photo tomorrow. Maybe the electrician will be able to squeeze him in again today, although yesterday the news was that he's fully booked up today. My own house is only 15 years old and, of course, has up-to-date electrical equipment that one should expect in a 2004 build. My CU, in the garage, has about 6 smaller MCBs and one larger MCB in the middle. I suspect the larger one says RCD on it, and is therefore not an MCB. Photo should tell. I rarely get any outage, although the MCBs are all super-sensitive. To the point where when I was still using filament lamps, just the bulb blowing would invariably trip the MCB for the relevant lighting circut. I gather from what I've been told that the electrical system in the old house is quite ancient, as the electrican stated that after the immediate fault has been rectified, at least temporarily, the whole CU urgently requires replacing. Maybe the wiring, too, which would be an enormous (and costly) job. It's a large house! MM Funny how peple always seem to recommend you give them money. We await the pics. NT |
#15
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Yes when something triggered similar problems here back in the 60s, it was
merely old perished wiring over the ceiling of a bedroom. the rubber had fallen off and there was a short. We had the house rewired. Brian -- ----- -- This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from... The Sofa of Brian Gaff... Blind user, so no pictures please Note this Signature is meaningless.! "MM" wrote in message ... On Thu, 25 Jul 2019 11:40:58 +0100, Andrew wrote: On 25/07/2019 10:05, Robin wrote: On 25/07/2019 07:30, MM wrote: A relative lives in a 300-year-old house. Yesterday he called to warn that when I visit tomorrow (Friday) it's likely that roughly half the house will still be without power. The other, smaller, half is unaffected. The electrician he called has so far not been able to diagnose the cause of the problem. The half that is out is on a separate "fuse" box. The other half of the house is unaffected. I write "fuse" in quotes, but I understand that it does at least have the switches, not old-fashioned fuse-wire fuses, although the equipment seems to be very old. That leaves a lot of room for speculation untrammelled by facts ![]() As already noted, pictures might help - ideally of both fuse boxes and of where the cable comes into the house. It might also help to know if the supply to the house is from overhead cables. Or even it it used to two houses, now combined but still with two incomers, main fuses and CU's *(like my bro & SIL's house). Yes, I did gather from speaking with my relative that the side of the house that is unaffected has a separate consumer unit. MM |
#16
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On 25/07/2019 12:54, MM wrote:
On Thu, 25 Jul 2019 11:40:58 +0100, Andrew wrote: On 25/07/2019 10:05, Robin wrote: On 25/07/2019 07:30, MM wrote: A relative lives in a 300-year-old house. Yesterday he called to warn that when I visit tomorrow (Friday) it's likely that roughly half the house will still be without power. The other, smaller, half is unaffected. The electrician he called has so far not been able to diagnose the cause of the problem. The half that is out is on a separate "fuse" box. The other half of the house is unaffected. I write "fuse" in quotes, but I understand that it does at least have the switches, not old-fashioned fuse-wire fuses, although the equipment seems to be very old. That leaves a lot of room for speculation untrammelled by facts ![]() As already noted, pictures might help - ideally of both fuse boxes and of where the cable comes into the house.┬* It might also help to know if the supply to the house is from overhead cables. Or even it it used to two houses, now combined but still with two incomers, main fuses and CU's *(like my bro & SIL's house). Yes, I did gather from speaking with my relative that the side of the house that is unaffected has a separate consumer unit. MM If there are two separate incomers (?originally 2 houses) then if they are on separate phases, be careful if they resort to running long extension leads from the unaffected half into the 'dead' half, because of the voltage difference. |
#17
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On Friday, 26 July 2019 12:27:41 UTC+1, Andrew wrote:
If there are two separate incomers (?originally 2 houses) then if they are on separate phases, be careful if they resort to running long extension leads from the unaffected half into the 'dead' half, because of the voltage difference. Some houses use three-phase power. Nobody seems to worry about that. Does anyone take special precautions when using a UPS whose output phase may be random relative to other unprotected mains circuits nearby? John |
#18
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#19
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Tufnell Park wrote:
There is a well established procedure for detecting which circuit is causing an RCD to trip. Viz with the RCD off switch off all mcb's. Reset the RCD Turn on each mcb in sequence to determine which circuit is causing the RCD to trip. Or if you're unlucky you find it's several of them together, or it's intermittent. |
#20
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On Saturday, 27 July 2019 14:45:57 UTC+1, Andy Burns wrote:
Tufnell Park wrote: There is a well established procedure for detecting which circuit is causing an RCD to trip. Viz with the RCD off switch off all mcb's. Reset the RCD Turn on each mcb in sequence to determine which circuit is causing the RCD to trip. Or if you're unlucky you find it's several of them together, or it's intermittent. Yes. That may catch it though, and it takes no real work, learning or equipment. NT |
#21
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On 27/07/2019 14:45, Andy Burns wrote:
Tufnell Park wrote: There is a well established procedure for detecting which circuit is causing an RCD to trip. Viz with the RCD off switch off all mcb's. Reset the RCD Turn on each mcb in sequence to determine which circuit is causing the RCD to trip. Or if you're unlucky you find it's several of them together, or it's intermittent. That's only if you are unlucky, most of the time it works! |
#22
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On Thu, 25 Jul 2019 15:07:46 -0700 (PDT), wrote:
[snip] Funny how peple always seem to recommend you give them money. We await the pics. Right-o, I'm back from visiting and here is the pic of said consumer unit: http://www.littletyke.myzen.co.uk/sc-consumer-unit.jpg This was installed in 1996. Meanwhile, the electrician found the fault. It was burnt insulation on the cables to the halogen ceiling light in the upstairs bathroom which caused the wires to short. Thanks all for the handy tips! MM |
#23
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On Fri, 26 Jul 2019 12:26:54 +0100, Andrew
wrote: On 25/07/2019 12:54, MM wrote: On Thu, 25 Jul 2019 11:40:58 +0100, Andrew wrote: On 25/07/2019 10:05, Robin wrote: On 25/07/2019 07:30, MM wrote: A relative lives in a 300-year-old house. Yesterday he called to warn that when I visit tomorrow (Friday) it's likely that roughly half the house will still be without power. The other, smaller, half is unaffected. The electrician he called has so far not been able to diagnose the cause of the problem. The half that is out is on a separate "fuse" box. The other half of the house is unaffected. I write "fuse" in quotes, but I understand that it does at least have the switches, not old-fashioned fuse-wire fuses, although the equipment seems to be very old. That leaves a lot of room for speculation untrammelled by facts ![]() As already noted, pictures might help - ideally of both fuse boxes and of where the cable comes into the house.* It might also help to know if the supply to the house is from overhead cables. Or even it it used to two houses, now combined but still with two incomers, main fuses and CU's *(like my bro & SIL's house). Yes, I did gather from speaking with my relative that the side of the house that is unaffected has a separate consumer unit. MM If there are two separate incomers (?originally 2 houses) then if they are on separate phases, be careful if they resort to running long extension leads from the unaffected half into the 'dead' half, because of the voltage difference. Actually, my relative *did* run a temporary extension lead to the kitchen fridge. The freezer in the garage was unaffected. For a pic of the consumer unit, see he http://www.littletyke.myzen.co.uk/sc-consumer-unit.jpg The CU was installed in 1996. Relative will have it replaced asap. Maybe (some of) the house wiring, too. It'll be a massive job, because the house was originally built 300 years ago and is huge. MM |
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#25
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On Monday, 29 July 2019 16:58:34 UTC+1, MM wrote:
On Thu, 25 Jul 2019 15:07:46 -0700 (PDT), tabbypurr wrote: [snip] Funny how peple always seem to recommend you give them money. We await the pics. Right-o, I'm back from visiting and here is the pic of said consumer unit: http://www.littletyke.myzen.co.uk/sc-consumer-unit.jpg This was installed in 1996. Meanwhile, the electrician found the fault. It was burnt insulation on the cables to the halogen ceiling light in the upstairs bathroom which caused the wires to short. Thanks all for the handy tips! MM Very blurry. Looks like you have no RCD there. NT |
#26
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On Monday, 29 July 2019 17:06:34 UTC+1, MM wrote:
On Fri, 26 Jul 2019 15:21:32 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Friday, 26 July 2019 12:27:41 UTC+1, Andrew wrote: If there are two separate incomers (?originally 2 houses) then if they are on separate phases, be careful if they resort to running long extension leads from the unaffected half into the 'dead' half, because of the voltage difference. Some houses use three-phase power. Nobody seems to worry about that. Does anyone take special precautions when using a UPS whose output phase may be random relative to other unprotected mains circuits nearby? This is a new one for me. *I* have two UPSs, one for each PC. They are both by APC. I just plug 'em into the mains. MM Just like everyone else does. However, if the mains fails the two UPSs will be outputting asynchronously generated waveforms, so some of the time the outputs will almost certainly be out of phase with each other and the relative peak voltages will be even higher than with two phases from a three-phase mains supply. In other words, your situation with two UPSs is potentially more "dangerous" than running an extension lead from one phase of a three-phase mains supply to an area with a different phase. In reality, there is no problem, just as there is no problem with having different phases of a three-phase supply near each other. This is because each live connection is insulated and to suffer the effects of the higher voltage difference there would have to be multiple simultaneous insulation failures. (I know that three phase mains will deliver much higher fault currents in a phase to phase fault than UPSs, but for that to happen there still need to be multiple simultaneous insulation failures.) John |
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