Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
Fuses,old or new?
14 Answers
My question is prompted by another thread asking about using a nail in a fuse(crazy!)
In our house we have the modern(?) fuses that you just push the button back in to reactivate.
It got me thinking,how many people on here have the old fuses that require fuse wire to be replaced when the fuse blows?
Also, are the old fuses (with wire) actually legal now?
I mean, I presume it is a requirement that all fuses in new houses are now the push button type?
In our house we have the modern(?) fuses that you just push the button back in to reactivate.
It got me thinking,how many people on here have the old fuses that require fuse wire to be replaced when the fuse blows?
Also, are the old fuses (with wire) actually legal now?
I mean, I presume it is a requirement that all fuses in new houses are now the push button type?
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I had the new version in my old house so I don't even know how to change a fuse wire which we have in this house.
We've had two electricians look at our fuse board and neither one has seen anything like before. I don't know the jargon...but he put something in to make it trip because apparently their was no earth. Although the electrics in the rooms seem to have been updated...he didn't know this until he did some work. He also said that if he wasn't a mate of my cousins he wouldn't have touched it with a barge pole.
I'm surprised I wake up every morning :-(
We've had two electricians look at our fuse board and neither one has seen anything like before. I don't know the jargon...but he put something in to make it trip because apparently their was no earth. Although the electrics in the rooms seem to have been updated...he didn't know this until he did some work. He also said that if he wasn't a mate of my cousins he wouldn't have touched it with a barge pole.
I'm surprised I wake up every morning :-(
New houses can have that type of fuse but they would be required to have RCD's put in place before or after the circuit which would prove to be an expensive and stupid setup. So to answer your question Mr Veritas, new houses use the push button fuses as apposed to the old type wire fuses. Fuse boards are only about £100.... The RCD is a legal requirement.
ummmm the house I'm currently sat in at the moment is far worse than your house. The wiring is being eaten by rats - bigger than most domestic cats. The new fuse board (installed by my brother who is a qualified electrician) is always tripping due to the fact the wiring was done by someone who didn't know positive from negative. This house is a walking death trap and I've been electricuted more than once here...