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I've come across a job where the emergency bulk head is wired direct to the CU, but it isn't lighting up, however if you trip the MCB, then the emergency back up kicks in and it is lighting, anyone come across this before?

Cheers Jools
 
with the MCB closed, check if you have 240V at the fitting. i assume you have as the battery back up is held off. once this is confirmed, i think you'll find the fault is in the fitting itself. btw, welcome to the asylum. if it's a non-maintained set up, though, then it's working as it should. i.e. no light until the power is dropped off.
 
thinking about it, it's probably non-maintained and thus perfectly OK. that means that the 240V supply is only to keep the battery charged, not to illuminate the fitting.
 
check with the client to find out if the fitting is normally on or off. usually there is a link across 2 terminals that you fit in order to maintain the light on when power is present.
 
The client says that, the fire brigade told her that it has to be lit at all times, there is another switched light in the area, so this seems a bit OTT.
 
I've come across a job where
the emergency bulk head is wired direct to the CU,
but it isn't lighting up, however if you trip the MCB, then the emergency back up kicks in and it is lighting, anyone come across this before?

Cheers Jools

are you saying this emergency light is on its own circuit? if so, how will it come on in the event of a lighting circuit failure?
 
probably a case of just fitting the link to make it maintained. check with manufacturer as to where the link goes. usually between the Lin and an adjacent terminal.
 
The client says that, the fire brigade told her that it has to be lit at all times, there is another switched light in the area, so this seems a bit OTT.

depends on the environment. if it's an office with plenty of lights and everyone knows the lay of the land, i would say non maintained is fine.
 
The CU is a twin RCD board, when one RCD trips, then the emergency light comes on, never seen electrics like this place before.

yes, the rcd will isolate all the circuits that it is protecting. but, if your lights are on mcb '1' and, the em' light is on mcb '2', the emergency light won't be activated when mcb '1' is tripped.
 
@ jools. the em's should be fed from the same circuit as the local lights, so that if the supply to those local lights fails, the em will light up.
 
once worked there for a few weeks on a sports store ( like jjb, but called something else). parked van as close as possible, about 200 yards from site, and this jobsworth threatened to have the bomb squad blow it up as it was close to a bus station. FFS. as if al quada are going to blow up buses in middleton.
 
I'm working in Middleton


Hope you've got a big dog sat in the van whilst your working lol. Better train it to put car/van fire out as well pmsl.


Yes Tel it is that bad as you have seen. Not all of that area but on some streets even the police dont walk by themselves.
 
It isn't THAT bad

It used to be. Mind you I was brought/dragged up on Ebor Gardens estate so Miggy is'nt that bad really. I play golf at Miggy but never through the school summer holidays. Got sick of the teenage chavs on their motorbikes riding on the fairways. few years ago a nicked 4x4 car did donuts on some of the greens.

Anyway have you sorted out this em light yet?
 

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