ChatterBank2 mins ago
Bulbs Keep Blowing
9 Answers
Whats the likely cause for 40W halogen bulbs in the bathroom blowing. There are 2 separate bulb sockets but the fault lies only in one of them. We put 3 different new bulbs in but they all blew not straight away but within days. You could almost tell they were about to blow as they flickered occasionally. The RCD didn't trip.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It's possibly a loose connection somewhere, causing arcing with subsequent current surges. Turn the power and remove the socket to see if you identify any loose connections. If you can't, try replacing the socket. (They're cheap!).
A relevant thread:
http:// www.ele ctricia nsforum s.co.uk /electr ical-fo rum-gen eral-el ectrica l-forum /37161- light-b ulbs-ke ep-blow ing-why .html
A relevant thread:
http://
>>>Also if its a wiring problem wouldn't the RCD trip off?
Physics was a subsidiary subject for my degree but I gave up trying to apply scientific logic to domestic wiring circuits a long time ago! Circuits sometimes trip out, or fuse, at current loadings well below the nominal rating. Equally, I've known circuits to be grossly overloaded without anything tripping out or blowing. The best example I've got is when I was working on stage and disco lighting for a school. Because we were limited to using standard 13A circuits, we had to take care to share the loading across lots of different sockets. However one day a 'helpful' pupil plugged everything in when I wasn't around. I found that we'd been pulling 62A through a single 13A socket (on a circuit that was both fused and RCD protected) for several hours without anything blowing! The only sign of anything wrong was that you could burn your hand if you touched the wall where the cables ran!
I still think that simply replacing the socket (for a few pounds from Wilkinson's) is likely to solve your problem.
Physics was a subsidiary subject for my degree but I gave up trying to apply scientific logic to domestic wiring circuits a long time ago! Circuits sometimes trip out, or fuse, at current loadings well below the nominal rating. Equally, I've known circuits to be grossly overloaded without anything tripping out or blowing. The best example I've got is when I was working on stage and disco lighting for a school. Because we were limited to using standard 13A circuits, we had to take care to share the loading across lots of different sockets. However one day a 'helpful' pupil plugged everything in when I wasn't around. I found that we'd been pulling 62A through a single 13A socket (on a circuit that was both fused and RCD protected) for several hours without anything blowing! The only sign of anything wrong was that you could burn your hand if you touched the wall where the cables ran!
I still think that simply replacing the socket (for a few pounds from Wilkinson's) is likely to solve your problem.
Chris (and OP)
RCDs do NOT trip on current overload, that is what Miniature Circuit Breakers (MCBs) do. MCBs are the switch blocks found in a line bank on the CU and have various ratings such as '16A', '32A' assigned on their casings.
RCDs trip when there is a recognised earth leakage fault at very small currents. They ar physically much bigger - about 50mm square on the front panel and they have a test switch mounted on them. You get one or two per CU.
It is unclear what the OP is talking about here - he says 'RCD' when he could mean 'MCB'. Either way both types of protection device can trip as the result in intermittency in the circuit they are protecting.
RCDs do NOT trip on current overload, that is what Miniature Circuit Breakers (MCBs) do. MCBs are the switch blocks found in a line bank on the CU and have various ratings such as '16A', '32A' assigned on their casings.
RCDs trip when there is a recognised earth leakage fault at very small currents. They ar physically much bigger - about 50mm square on the front panel and they have a test switch mounted on them. You get one or two per CU.
It is unclear what the OP is talking about here - he says 'RCD' when he could mean 'MCB'. Either way both types of protection device can trip as the result in intermittency in the circuit they are protecting.