newlearner
DIY
When working on circuits do you isolate whole board or just the final circuits using MCBs ? Or is there any instances when the whole board has to be isolated even if you are working on few final circuits?
Thanks.
Thanks.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Discuss When working on circuits do you isolate whole board or just the final circuits using MCBs ? in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net
Hi Mate no disrespect intended, but I feel it would be wrong and unprofessional to offer such advice to a DIY person, so end of my involvement in this post, leave it to those who know what they are doing. Sorry if I sound abrupt , but it's your life we are talking about here.When working on circuits do you isolate whole board or just the final circuits using MCBs ? Or is there any instances when the whole board has to be isolated even if you are working on few final circuits?
Thanks.
You would need a very good reason not to isolate the whole board. Risk assessment and all that.
Switching off all the lights in an installation can create risk for the homeowner and the electricianDomestic, there’s no excuse.
10 minutes without the broadband router powered isn’t a good enough reason for not doing the work safely.
Do you have any form of documentation to permit the working on or near live conductors ?I usually work on commercial and industrial installations so switching off the whole board would be impractical. For a DIYer like yourself I would always recommend isolating the whole board, make sure you are aware that the supply cable and terminals will always be live.
Some older industrial boards are a nightmare with exposed, closely spaced busbars, it's good to switch those off before installing MCBs and so on. The old Crabtree C50 boards have exposed 3phase terminals all down the sides, not fun to install new circuits with the power on.
View attachment 88040
Head torch.Switching off all the lights in an installation can create risk for the homeowner and the electrician
If it's unnecessary
I'm hoping an electrical permit to work covers this.Do you have any form of documentation to permit the working on or near live conductors ?
We’re not assisting a trained electrician here. OP is tagged DIY, so advice is geared toward non-experienced.Well that's a little more dangerous of a scenario
A trained electrician shouldn't need to switch off an entire installation in every circumstance when working on circuits imo
On an unknown installation I would anyway. Also, if doing work that warrants a certificate, then the whole board needs isolating before it's possible to safely and accurately test the earthing arrangements.Or is there any instances when the whole board has to be isolated even if you are working on few final circuits?
Fair pointWe’re not assisting a trained electrician here. OP is tagged DIY, so advice is geared toward non-experienced.
Even a trained, well experienced spark can have the odd accident concerning working on a circuit within a live board.
Another story I heard about 3 older guys, decades of experience, pushing new cables along conduit into a busbar chamber. Cables kept catching on the bush, so one guy stuck his head into the live chamber to get a better look….
He lost his life, his two mates lost their jobs.
Reply to When working on circuits do you isolate whole board or just the final circuits using MCBs ? in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net