Today I was at a customers house (domestic) to do a simple light change.
I turned the existing light on, went down stairs and turned what I thought would be the correct breaker off. I went back up the stairs and the light was off. I never take it for granted that that is the correct breaker so I tested with the meter as well. It tested as dead and I was about to start removing it.
The customer then came up the stairs and asked me why I'd switched off all the power rather than just the lights, I thought I had perhaps tripped an RCD. Went back to the CU and the RCD was still up, yet all power was off.
So... Whilst I had been walking back up the stairs after switching the breaker off they had had the power cut in the street! This has never happened to me before and I'm just wondering if I made any errors in my safe isolation procedure which could have avoided this? I can't see how I could have though. Luckily it was the right circuit breaker but that is besides the point. Bit scary!
I turned the existing light on, went down stairs and turned what I thought would be the correct breaker off. I went back up the stairs and the light was off. I never take it for granted that that is the correct breaker so I tested with the meter as well. It tested as dead and I was about to start removing it.
The customer then came up the stairs and asked me why I'd switched off all the power rather than just the lights, I thought I had perhaps tripped an RCD. Went back to the CU and the RCD was still up, yet all power was off.
So... Whilst I had been walking back up the stairs after switching the breaker off they had had the power cut in the street! This has never happened to me before and I'm just wondering if I made any errors in my safe isolation procedure which could have avoided this? I can't see how I could have though. Luckily it was the right circuit breaker but that is besides the point. Bit scary!