He was in the middle of decorating his new house, I only met him a couple of months ago and he seems like a really nice chap.
Anyway in the lounge one of the electrical socket face plates had been unscrewed from the wall for decorating. The house is 1920's and the wiring looked brand new in this particular socket.
Long story short a few months ago he had a spark from checkatrade to put in 3 new sockets. This one socket had a metal back box which had no earth from the backbox to the socket. I said to him that I had always been told they must be earthed in case the wiring frayed and this become live when the socket was away from the wall.
Anyway afterwards he phoned the electrician and he said it was an old back box and had no earth terminal in it, but I thought that just adding a washer to the screw that attaches it into the wall and treating it like an earth strap would work. Or am I just barking up the wrong tree altogether?
I then had a quick look at the fuse box, it's one of them old wylex ones with the fuses that you add the wire yourself when it blows. No RCD protection and signs of melting around one of the 32 amp fuses.
I determined one 32 amp fuse did the upstairs ring and spurred off for the immersion, the other 32amp did the down stairs sockets. The third 32amp which was melting did the cooker so I went into the kitchen to have a look.
My mate then said that they always smelt burning from the fusebox when the cooker was on. The cooker cable also supplied all the kitchen sockets and outside garage. 6 in total that were visible.
I asked what else they had on when the cooker is going, he replied, 'the washing machine, tumble drier and microwave and occasionally the kettle'
So I kind of said just don't use anything else when the cooker is going and this needs to be sorted asap as this is probably the reason the fuse is getting hot, it didn't help either because the fuse had what looked like a 16mm copper tail strand in it, I went to toolstation and got the correct fuse wire.
I'm surprised the spark who put the sockets in did not notice the melting 32amp fuse, it was very noticeable.
Anyway are any of you here covering Leighton Buzzard. If not can you recommend anybody that does cover this area?
He is having an extension built shortly which is going to need a few sockets and lights in it as well!
Thanks in advance...
Anyway in the lounge one of the electrical socket face plates had been unscrewed from the wall for decorating. The house is 1920's and the wiring looked brand new in this particular socket.
Long story short a few months ago he had a spark from checkatrade to put in 3 new sockets. This one socket had a metal back box which had no earth from the backbox to the socket. I said to him that I had always been told they must be earthed in case the wiring frayed and this become live when the socket was away from the wall.
Anyway afterwards he phoned the electrician and he said it was an old back box and had no earth terminal in it, but I thought that just adding a washer to the screw that attaches it into the wall and treating it like an earth strap would work. Or am I just barking up the wrong tree altogether?
I then had a quick look at the fuse box, it's one of them old wylex ones with the fuses that you add the wire yourself when it blows. No RCD protection and signs of melting around one of the 32 amp fuses.
I determined one 32 amp fuse did the upstairs ring and spurred off for the immersion, the other 32amp did the down stairs sockets. The third 32amp which was melting did the cooker so I went into the kitchen to have a look.
My mate then said that they always smelt burning from the fusebox when the cooker was on. The cooker cable also supplied all the kitchen sockets and outside garage. 6 in total that were visible.
I asked what else they had on when the cooker is going, he replied, 'the washing machine, tumble drier and microwave and occasionally the kettle'
So I kind of said just don't use anything else when the cooker is going and this needs to be sorted asap as this is probably the reason the fuse is getting hot, it didn't help either because the fuse had what looked like a 16mm copper tail strand in it, I went to toolstation and got the correct fuse wire.
I'm surprised the spark who put the sockets in did not notice the melting 32amp fuse, it was very noticeable.
Anyway are any of you here covering Leighton Buzzard. If not can you recommend anybody that does cover this area?
He is having an extension built shortly which is going to need a few sockets and lights in it as well!
Thanks in advance...