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Prat P
I always think the Murray loop test is the simplest and quickest test to locate a fault.Evening all...
I'm in two minds whether to post this but i've thought about it for a while and was hopeing someone could give me a very clear idea of how they would find the fault.
Lets say we have a ring. We test between N-E at the CU and find a poor IR reading, lets say 0Mohms, ie socket screw has gone through the neutral.
I break the ring somewhere in the house and then test both neutrals to see which side the fault is on.
I then break the ring between the CU and the already broken point (on the fault side) etc etc until I have found the fault.
This sounds very straight forward, but in practise it can be very difficult to know which sockets/FCU are actually on the faulty side once you have broken the ring as you have to completely guess at the layout of the ring.
The only way I could think of doing it would be to have a good idea of where all the sockets fed by the ring are in the first place, then break the ring, find the faulty side and then reconnect just the faulty side in the CU so that you know that any socket that is dead is not on the faulty side and can be discounted. Any socket that is live could be the culprit, and slowly break it down this way which will also give you a bit of a picture of the layout of the ring.
How do others do this?
Cheers..