He's a question for you.
What (if any) are the dangers of working INDOORS on an electrical circuit during a Thunderstorm ? Heck you would have to be stupid to work outside in one, but I was considering what would happen if there was a nearby strike and I was working on an open consumer unit connecting up say a new radial circuit. Could a sufficient induced voltage into the ground and incoming cable cause a voltage/current on all the incoming cables including the earth bonding, thus giving me or anyone nearby a nasty shock ?
I ask because I am doing something like that today. I've completed all the outside electrical work, and I was scheduled to hook it all up into their consumer unit this afternoon, so only working indoors, but with a cable going outside, and the Met Office have just issued a weather warning of severe thunderstorms later today.
Curious as to what you would do, and whether my theory above is correct. Would you do the work, or wait until the storm has passed, or reschedule ?
What (if any) are the dangers of working INDOORS on an electrical circuit during a Thunderstorm ? Heck you would have to be stupid to work outside in one, but I was considering what would happen if there was a nearby strike and I was working on an open consumer unit connecting up say a new radial circuit. Could a sufficient induced voltage into the ground and incoming cable cause a voltage/current on all the incoming cables including the earth bonding, thus giving me or anyone nearby a nasty shock ?
I ask because I am doing something like that today. I've completed all the outside electrical work, and I was scheduled to hook it all up into their consumer unit this afternoon, so only working indoors, but with a cable going outside, and the Met Office have just issued a weather warning of severe thunderstorms later today.
Curious as to what you would do, and whether my theory above is correct. Would you do the work, or wait until the storm has passed, or reschedule ?