Here's a weird one that's suitable for losing my forum virginity...
The villain of the piece is my stair head light, which went out one evening. No drama, no breaker tripping, just darkness. So, I whipped out the existing energy saver and changed it. Nothing. So, I tried another one, and an incandescent. Result, seven times the square root of foxtrot alpha.
Next day, I returned with an LED neon thingy from GnomeBase.
The light can be switched from both levels so I took out the top (single) switch to reveal...lots of red wire, and there were lives to detect in there.
'Check the bulb holder' I thought. Here's where it gets strange. Both pins inside tested as live!
The holder and ceiling rose were aged so I just changed it. No evident damage to the wires coming from the loft and no evidence of crosstalk between live and neutral. All changing the rise has done is make the tester light brighter.
So I'm stumped. Nothing else has been fiddled with so something has failed all by its little self. The bottom line is therefore simple...er, Help,
Cheers, David
The villain of the piece is my stair head light, which went out one evening. No drama, no breaker tripping, just darkness. So, I whipped out the existing energy saver and changed it. Nothing. So, I tried another one, and an incandescent. Result, seven times the square root of foxtrot alpha.
Next day, I returned with an LED neon thingy from GnomeBase.
The light can be switched from both levels so I took out the top (single) switch to reveal...lots of red wire, and there were lives to detect in there.
'Check the bulb holder' I thought. Here's where it gets strange. Both pins inside tested as live!
The holder and ceiling rose were aged so I just changed it. No evident damage to the wires coming from the loft and no evidence of crosstalk between live and neutral. All changing the rise has done is make the tester light brighter.
So I'm stumped. Nothing else has been fiddled with so something has failed all by its little self. The bottom line is therefore simple...er, Help,
Cheers, David