This is your first mistake. Keep the CPC continuous and connected to the MET throughout the fault-finding exercise.I had the CPC disconnected at the consumer unit when I was testing the cable
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Discuss Fault on lighting circuit in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net
This is your first mistake. Keep the CPC continuous and connected to the MET throughout the fault-finding exercise.I had the CPC disconnected at the consumer unit when I was testing the cable
This is your first mistake. Keep the CPC continuous and connected to the MET throughout the fault-finding exercise.
Is there 2 faults here or if the cpc between db and first switch was clear between l,n,e and not damaged and earth continuity verified then cpc further down the line might be restored .or have I misunderstood your wiring descriptionBear with me because this is long. So got an intermittent fault on the upstairs lights. Trips the mcb after a few hours, getting a reading of 0.01 mega ohms between live and earth at the board, tested cable going to db from first switch and it’s clear. Tested the cable going from first switch to rest of switches and getting a reading of 5.2 megaohms so can’t understand where the 0.01 is coming from as I wired it so know there isn’t any joins. Also the cable going from first switch to rest of switches loses its earth, so I think the cable is obviously damaged but can’t understand why this isn’t showing when I test and why it’s tripping intermittently. Maybe I’m missing something completely obvious
So there is 2 faults but I don’t know if they are linked. Basically losing the CPC between switch 1 and 2. But not sure if this is what’s causing the tripping as the cable must be damagedIs there 2 faults here or if the cpc between db and first switch was clear between l,n,e and not damaged then cpc further down the line might be restored .or have I misunderstood your wiring description
I will try this when I’m next on the job, thanks for the help.Possibly:
Your IR tests carried out downstream of the first switch are between line and the floating CPC, that is not connected to the earthing system.
However, the fault may not be between line and that floating CPC. It may actually be between line and some other part of the building that does have a tenuous connection to the earthing system. Hence why you get low IR L-E tested at the board (where the CPC is connected to the MET), but not downstream of that first switch.
Try: Connect your wander lead to the MET, and take that with you to a point downstream of the first switch, and do your IR test between L and the wander lead. I suspect you will now get a low IR reading.
Had a similar fault yesterday. Low IR 0.08 N-E, but the CPC had become disconnected somewhere. Once the CPC was reconnected, it was a dead short of a fraction of an ohm.
So there is 2 faults but I don’t know if they are linked. Basically losing the CPC between switch 1 and 2. But not sure if this is what’s causing the tripping as the cable must be
Good luckI will try this when I’m next on the job, thanks for the help.
Like I said, don't take offense.No it’s not. He asked what reading I got when I tested on low resistance ohms so wasn’t megaohms. So maybe it’s yourself that needs to know the facts beforehand
I definitely didn’t get 10000 ohmsLike I said, don't take offense.
I'm just speaking factually.
You said 'I think' I got, therefore I'm just asking for accurate figures.
It would be very surprising to get a reading almost exactly 100 times smaller than the IR reading. It's more likely that you got 10000 ohms.
Cool.I definitely didn’t get 10000 ohms
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