A man after my own heart! Delete Facebook,and get experimenting in the garage
I will describe a method of inserting a fault test-bed,in to your rig,which i made many years back. All you need is a piece of board or plastic,1/2" thick,12" x 4" with two,fixed 3 terminal connectors or chocky blocks,one at each end.
This is inserted anywhere you like,in a ring or radial circuit,on your board.
Inbetween these two connectors,is your play area. I had several standard layouts,and will describe a couple.
One,was a 12" piece of T&E,with the middle 4",carefully stripped of sheathing and insulation,to reveal three,bare,conductors. These can have any number of materials laid across,or placed under,2 or 3 of them,and tested accordingly.
Damp or wet cavity insulation,plasterboard and brick,being favourites,but i never ran out of ideas....a handful of ashes,from any common building material,then dampen it....i even remember using dead mice...dry or fresh
...basically,it is an operation of deliberately using mediums you will encounter in real life,and practising with your test device,so the readings correlate to what you know,rather than what you are seeking,which invariably will be the case in the field.
The main thing you are aiming for,is NOT to be surprised,when testing on an actual installation,and getting confident,with your chosen test instruments.
There is no wrong material to introduce in to a circuit....nature and the great British public,will see to that...you can take that, from a man who,at the age of fifteen,woke one morning,desperate to see what the resistance was,of a single strand of galvanised,barbed wire,around a 4 acre field