I have now for luck replaced temporarily that socket and the same result - seems to a problem within the fuse box.The wiring was red , black and bare wire with black overcoat.
Thanks for your help. The dual socket did not have a grommet and the earth wire was covered black.
I used a Megger leakage meter for the measurements and a kewtech socket tester which gave 3 green lights!
Thanks for your help. The dual socket did not have a grommet and the earth wire was covered black.
I used a Megger leakage meter for the measurements and a kewtech socket tester which gave 3 green lights!
Daughter’s new house.
Garage has very old wylex distribution box connected to a double socket and a lighting circuit with one neon.
put an RCD’ed extension cord in socket and the RCD trips instantly.
Measured leak current at main fuse area.
The neon light was switched off.
Leakages
house as is...
I have a four camera wired system.
I fancy adding a 5th camera.
I have an idea that someone may have invented a splitter box that could rotate from one camera to another say every 30 seconds - so that you can cover 2 areas for the price of one channel on the recorder.
any other ideas would be...
if the back box is earthed through the conduit then you could use a self drilling screw into the back-box with a ring crimp on one end of a piece of earth wire from it to the switch. Some back boxes don’t have an earth terminal.
I think you have covered it.
My opinion is that the RCD should be outside the bathroom but near it if the CU is not covered by RCD.
My setup started as a large shower pump taken from a 13 amp socket ( in the same circuit as the 3amp central heating ) .
This got changed to a digital mixing unit...
That's what my did but when I e to video it itvran upwards from 50 to 690 and rhen back down.
I found the following on Testerman’s web site
The Kewtech Kewprove 4 Proving Unit is a portable battery-operated unit capable of verifying the correct functionality of a voltage tester. Kewprove 4...
I emailed Kewtech and they stated that it does cascade up the voltages before cascading down. While this wasn’t what happened initially, it is doing that now and I don’t know what changed!
If the proving unit had started at the low end (50volts) and slowly rise to the higher voltages where you could halt before going to higher voltages by removing the probes surely would have been safer ?
My fluke clamp meter says don’t use if voltages greater than 600volts - and the kewtech starts at 690 volts and you can’t say “please start lower than 690 volts.
I decided,having lived with using a live circuit, to buy a proving unit. I opted for a Kewtech Prove 4 which covers 5 voltages between 690volts and 50 volts. The device starts at 690 volts which is ok for my Megger 2 pole tester. My fluke clamp meter has a limit of 600 volts. The second problem...
I had the problem of installed an RCD socket in the garage and put in a tool and the rcd and main RCD tripped.
put extension cable in the rcd socket and the RCD didn’t trip putting the tool in the extension.
my problem, I think, was the freezer in the same circuit.
Removed the RCD socket and...
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