Got an emergency call out from a very worried old lady the other night - the power at her apartment had gone off and the kitchen light was smouldering badly. She'd been on the phone to the DNO (Northern Powergrid), they were telling her to turn the main switch off but she couldn't understand and was frightened. As soon as I walked in I could smell the smouldering, although it had stopped by then as lighting circuit breaker had tripped. The light was an old fluorescent batten with a bulky transformer - it was hot and could tell it was burnt out. At first I thought it must have just failed itself and the MCB has done it's job. Alarm bells started ringing though when she said her tv and table lamp flickered for a short while before going off.
I turned the main switch off at the consumer unit and measured the supply voltage - 415v between line and neutral, 240v between neutral and earth! I said I'd contact Northern Powergrid and there was nothing more I could do for now but reassured her the power was isolated. I was puzzled because the stairwell lights were fine and I could see lights on in other apartments. The next morning, I phoned her as NPG wanted confirmation she would be in for the next three hours. Apparently the other two apartments on that side of the building, directly below hers, also had no power but they had gone to bed so didn't realise until the morning. She phoned me back later to say someone had been to her apartment, checked the supply in the meter cabinet and told her it was fine.
I went back later to put power back on for her, check everything was safe inside and replace the kitchen light. I checked the supply voltage, hey presto 240v line to neutral, 0v neutral to earth. Turned the power on again, numerous light bulbs had blown, a radio, a radio alarm clock and her tv aren't working, the fuses were all fine. Out of curiosity I unscrewed the cover for the radio alarm clock and sure enough several components had blown/melted.
My concern is how little information the engineer from NPG gave about any fault on their network that had now been sorted, just told her it was fine. Well, I wasn't imagining the reading on my tester the night before and several appliances have been damaged that were working. I'm wondering how likely it is that the fault is intermittent and wasn't showing at the time the engineer came - he checked it, said it was fine and cleared off. Or is it possible they are keeping quiet about what had caused it in the hope she won't make any claim off them for any damage?
I turned the main switch off at the consumer unit and measured the supply voltage - 415v between line and neutral, 240v between neutral and earth! I said I'd contact Northern Powergrid and there was nothing more I could do for now but reassured her the power was isolated. I was puzzled because the stairwell lights were fine and I could see lights on in other apartments. The next morning, I phoned her as NPG wanted confirmation she would be in for the next three hours. Apparently the other two apartments on that side of the building, directly below hers, also had no power but they had gone to bed so didn't realise until the morning. She phoned me back later to say someone had been to her apartment, checked the supply in the meter cabinet and told her it was fine.
I went back later to put power back on for her, check everything was safe inside and replace the kitchen light. I checked the supply voltage, hey presto 240v line to neutral, 0v neutral to earth. Turned the power on again, numerous light bulbs had blown, a radio, a radio alarm clock and her tv aren't working, the fuses were all fine. Out of curiosity I unscrewed the cover for the radio alarm clock and sure enough several components had blown/melted.
My concern is how little information the engineer from NPG gave about any fault on their network that had now been sorted, just told her it was fine. Well, I wasn't imagining the reading on my tester the night before and several appliances have been damaged that were working. I'm wondering how likely it is that the fault is intermittent and wasn't showing at the time the engineer came - he checked it, said it was fine and cleared off. Or is it possible they are keeping quiet about what had caused it in the hope she won't make any claim off them for any damage?