S
SimpleSimon
Thought I'd share this with you today.
Went to a customers house who after coming back from his holidays had a leak in the bathroom and spread to the airing cupboard.
On having this leak it's made all the water pipes in the property live. So customer disconnected immersion circuit at the fuse and I come round.
IR the circuit, get poor reading of 0.43 N-E. Looks like water damage in the wall. But why didn't the fuse blow when he got a shock? No RCD, support bonding non-existent in bathroom but present in airing cupboard.
Go downstairs to main bonding conductor under sink, do a continuity between disconnected bonding conductor at both ends of the run and find that the conductor which can be no more than a 1.5m has a reading of 1.05ohms. Hmm its seems the bonding was so old and corroded under the sink it wasn't allowing enough fault current to flow to blow the fuse. So always check the 0.05ohms reading regardless of length because you never know.
Can't go behind the walls just yet as it housing association.
Went to a customers house who after coming back from his holidays had a leak in the bathroom and spread to the airing cupboard.
On having this leak it's made all the water pipes in the property live. So customer disconnected immersion circuit at the fuse and I come round.
IR the circuit, get poor reading of 0.43 N-E. Looks like water damage in the wall. But why didn't the fuse blow when he got a shock? No RCD, support bonding non-existent in bathroom but present in airing cupboard.
Go downstairs to main bonding conductor under sink, do a continuity between disconnected bonding conductor at both ends of the run and find that the conductor which can be no more than a 1.5m has a reading of 1.05ohms. Hmm its seems the bonding was so old and corroded under the sink it wasn't allowing enough fault current to flow to blow the fuse. So always check the 0.05ohms reading regardless of length because you never know.
Can't go behind the walls just yet as it housing association.