A BG fused connection unit, with neon.
A boiler.
Fuse out. Spur switched off.
I was checking polarity after a colleague had 2nd fixed it and without thinking chose the load N not the supply N.
This led to discovering:
120v between Supply Live and Load N
120v between Supply Live and Load Live
I tried his 2 pole tester, same except that one said 50v.
Look at boiler end, all fine.
The strangeness stops when I disconnect earth at the boiler.
IR tests L-E and N-E at boiler (at 50v) were >99M
Should I conclude that there's are very very high resistance L to E and N to E paths inside the boiler and yet the impedance is low enough to light up a tester, or am I missing something embarrassingly basic?!
Thanks
A boiler.
Fuse out. Spur switched off.
I was checking polarity after a colleague had 2nd fixed it and without thinking chose the load N not the supply N.
This led to discovering:
120v between Supply Live and Load N
120v between Supply Live and Load Live
I tried his 2 pole tester, same except that one said 50v.
Look at boiler end, all fine.
The strangeness stops when I disconnect earth at the boiler.
IR tests L-E and N-E at boiler (at 50v) were >99M
Should I conclude that there's are very very high resistance L to E and N to E paths inside the boiler and yet the impedance is low enough to light up a tester, or am I missing something embarrassingly basic?!
Thanks