Would you put a wall switch in a bathroom | Page 2 | on ElectriciansForums

Discuss Would you put a wall switch in a bathroom in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

Funny, but it's never been a problem in the vast majority of other countries, like the States Canada, most if not all of Europe, and just about everywhere else i ever worked or visited. More like the inherited UK's draconian rules that have always beligered UK bathroom installations.....

Maybe so but the nature of the switch means you usually don't get killed just a tickle or slam as you can't spasm clamp your hands on it till you fry, I have a plastic toothbrush holder and when I shower its full of condensation so why not a switch ...its to cover the small chance of a shock not the big picture of it rarely happens... we all know you can walk out of a bathroom with dripping wet hands when your body is at a lowered resistance and switch another switch on but in the scope of things its dry and not been ingressed with moisture while you shower.

Yes on the wider scope of things maybe draconian and extreme but the UK holds one of the lowest fatality by electric shock 'when the regs have been followed' than most other countries using the same voltage ... opinions always change when you know someone who has been killed by such situations ... 1 life is too many when it can be avoided quite easily by a simple regulation that doesn't add really any costs to a install.. Think your mind is been influenced by your location and your now slightly de-sensitised to our stricter regulations ..... I know you know your stuff ENG and hold you in respect but all i was doing was expressing a regulation.
 
Maybe so but the nature of the switch means you usually don't get killed just a tickle or slam as you can't spasm clamp your hands on it till you fry, I have a plastic toothbrush holder and when I shower its full of condensation so why not a switch ...its to cover the small chance of a shock not the big picture of it rarely happens... we all know you can walk out of a bathroom with dripping wet hands when your body is at a lowered resistance and switch another switch on but in the scope of things its dry and not been ingressed with moisture while you shower.

Yes on the wider scope of things maybe draconian and extreme but the UK holds one of the lowest fatality by electric shock 'when the regs have been followed' than most other countries using the same voltage ... opinions always change when you know someone who has been killed by such situations ... 1 life is too many when it can be avoided quite easily by a simple regulation that doesn't add really any costs to a install.. Think your mind is been influenced by your location and your now slightly de-sensitised to our stricter regulations ..... I know you know your stuff ENG and hold you in respect but all i was doing was expressing a regulation.
DC dark?....
 
OK..thanks for clearing that up Dark.

Depends where you hear this but voltage and current are key ... in america AC is far less dangerous due to the lower voltage but over here our voltage makes it nearly as lethal, its quite possible to let go on 50hz but depends on the muscles under influence .. they will be pulsing 100times a second but DC holds no bars and even lower voltages can give permanent muscle lock so yes your correct DC is by far more dangerous but dont be complacent AC kills alot of people in this country because they can't let go ... hence the lengthy thread on the young lass that got killed holding the ladder to the loft.
 
Depends where you hear this but voltage and current are key ... in america AC is far less dangerous due to the lower voltage but over here our voltage makes it nearly as lethal, its quite possible to let go on 50hz but depends on the muscles under influence .. they will be pulsing 100times a second but DC holds no bars and even lower voltages can give permanent muscle lock so yes your correct DC is by far more dangerous but dont be complacent AC kills alot of people in this country because they can't let go ... hence the lengthy thread on the young lass that got killed holding the ladder to the loft.
yep...thats probably what i should have said...

i know that DC is more dicy to be dealing with..

no doubt Tony will drop in on this at some point....
 
Depends where you hear this but voltage and current are key ... in america AC is far less dangerous due to the lower voltage but over here our voltage makes it nearly as lethal, its quite possible to let go on 50hz but depends on the muscles under influence .. they will be pulsing 100times a second but DC holds no bars and even lower voltages can give permanent muscle lock so yes your correct DC is by far more dangerous but dont be complacent AC kills alot of people in this country because they can't let go ... hence the lengthy thread on the young lass that got killed holding the ladder to the loft.

Does that apply to the 240 volt washing machines/dryers you often see in American/Canadian bathrooms?? lol!

One thing i will say, is that in most other countries they do tend to have effective extraction fans, unlike the piddly things you have in the UK. (when in fact a fan is present, most UK bathrooms have no fan...)

The other thing i would mention, is that many of those other countries will have 6mA (USA/Can) or 10mA (elsewhere) RCD's for bathroom circuits. The UK for some reason, rarely make use of 10mA RCD devices...

I know what you mean though, i used to have the same opinions as many here, before working overseas....
 
this is it...

its a common misconception that you actually have to be in contact with exposed live parts to get a shock...

not so..

voltages can `track` across wet/damp surfaces...

In one of those fits of pure genius plumbers have we had a Jackson tea urn just below an old EE type SS DP 240V board. It used to fascinate me watching the magic electrickery stuff bouncing around inside it. I wasn't going to touch it!


yep...thats probably what i should have said...

i know that DC is more dicy to be dealing with..

no doubt Tony will drop in on this at some point....

I’ve worked on all sorts of DC systems. Some I was happy working on live, others I wasn’t.
We had DC control systems where I’d be quite happily be twisting cores together with my bare fingers that was 100V+ and yet I’ve had a belt off 24V-.

The DC power systems 220V, 440V, 660V were supposed to be earth free (note, supposed to be). They all had high resistance earth fault monitoring, no one trusted it.
If the monitoring indicated a fault you’ve never seen an electricians workshop empty so fast.

I was taught that after testing for dead you tapped the busbars with the back of your fingers. The theory being you couldn’t grip the busbar, never got a belt off the power systems so can’t say if that’s right or not.
 
I’ve worked on all sorts of DC systems. Some I was happy working on live, others I wasn’t.
We had DC control systems where I’d be quite happily be twisting cores together with my bare fingers that was 100V+ and yet I’ve had a belt off 24V-.

Yep, DC still has it's uses...lol!!

Most main switchboards both MV and LV will have 110V or 24V ''DC'' full wave rectified controls with at least a 72 hour battery back-up. I believe this is also the case for Network substations too. I know that the ones i've been in, all have isolated/protected battery rooms..

Alas none of this has anything to do with wall switches in bathrooms!! lol!!
 
In one of those fits of pure genius plumbers have we had a Jackson tea urn just below an old EE type SS DP 240V board. It used to fascinate me watching the magic electrickery stuff bouncing around inside it. I wasn't going to touch it!




I’ve worked on all sorts of DC systems. Some I was happy working on live, others I wasn’t.
We had DC control systems where I’d be quite happily be twisting cores together with my bare fingers that was 100V+ and yet I’ve had a belt off 24V-.

The DC power systems 220V, 440V, 660V were supposed to be earth free (note, supposed to be). They all had high resistance earth fault monitoring, no one trusted it.
If the monitoring indicated a fault you’ve never seen an electricians workshop empty so fast.

I was taught that after testing for dead you tapped the busbars with the back of your fingers. The theory being you couldn’t grip the busbar, never got a belt off the power systems so can’t say if that’s right or not.

LOL ... I still do that religiously I don't care how many meters etc I use to cofirm power off I always tap with the back off my finger.... its worked for me once when my probe tester proved ok and lit up then showed busbars were dead .. i repeated then still get same results - tapped with back of finger and got a reet belt!.... the wire on my tester had a broken core that open circuited only when i raised it up to test the busbar but closed when checking on the proving unit in my lap!! :shocked3:
 
I was taught that after testing for dead you tapped the busbars with the back of your fingers. The theory being you couldn’t grip the busbar, never got a belt off the power systems so can’t say if that’s right or not.

Good test unless you happen to be a young lad in a slightly confined space where the belt throws your hand onto the cabinet which bounces it back onto the source which throws it back onto the cabinet which bounces it ....... :sad:

Like you, I cant say for sure, but I have heard it happened to someone .....
 
Do they still teach you to do this at college or has it all become so anally PC its not taught anymore, we were openly taught to use this method after testing and in some cases if you forgot your meters lol....Oh how times change!!!
 

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