Society & Culture1 min ago
trip switch on electricity blows
18 Answers
My main trip switch on my electricity has blown twice recently, we are suddenly plunged into total darkness - and there doesn't seem to be any obvious reason for it. But both times it happened I was doing the ironing and my son was in the shower. And its night time with a few lights turned on etc. Would the iron and shower together cause this to happen, or what. Does anyone know ??
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.First thing I'd do is check with your power supply company and see if they've been experiencing power surges. It's highly unusual for the main circuit breakers to trip.
Here in the U.S. we find that older circuit breakers can actually wear out. Sometimes it's due to the spring breaking or becoming corroded and the tension lessens or there may have been a defect in the manufacturing process that's just now showing up... I think that's unlikely, but a possibility.
Personally, I'd check with the supplier for any anomalies...
Here in the U.S. we find that older circuit breakers can actually wear out. Sometimes it's due to the spring breaking or becoming corroded and the tension lessens or there may have been a defect in the manufacturing process that's just now showing up... I think that's unlikely, but a possibility.
Personally, I'd check with the supplier for any anomalies...
I think it unlikely that a combination of things being used would blow the circuit breaker. Sounds more probable that one of the appliances you had on at the time has an intermittent problem causing a spike on the supply. Maybe the iron, maybe the shower, or maybe something permanently plugged in that switches on occasionally, like a boiler or freezer. May need some detective work to find.
I agree with BM.........unless, it's a VERY new house built under the newer 17th edition Elec. Regs. The house may have had some electrical work lately which would have necessitated the whole thing being brought up to the new standards.
Sorry about all this waffle, but today, ALL circuits have to be RCD protected.
Kassee ....... perhaps you have an RCD as your main incomer switch?
Anyway, back to the plot. Assuming it's an RCD that's tripping out, most likely to be earth leakage. Elec cookers, and freezers are the most common causes of "nuisance tripping". During their normal use, they leak a small current to earth ........ sometimes enough to cause a 30ma trip to operate.
I had this recently. I did a test on their RCD, and it was operating at around 20ma instead of 30ma. I just replaced the RCD and all was fine.
Of course it could still be the iron. Process of elimination. Has it tripped without ironing?
Sorry about all this waffle, but today, ALL circuits have to be RCD protected.
Kassee ....... perhaps you have an RCD as your main incomer switch?
Anyway, back to the plot. Assuming it's an RCD that's tripping out, most likely to be earth leakage. Elec cookers, and freezers are the most common causes of "nuisance tripping". During their normal use, they leak a small current to earth ........ sometimes enough to cause a 30ma trip to operate.
I had this recently. I did a test on their RCD, and it was operating at around 20ma instead of 30ma. I just replaced the RCD and all was fine.
Of course it could still be the iron. Process of elimination. Has it tripped without ironing?
Thanks for all your answers. Not sure what an RCD is - but we are not a new build. We have all electrics on separate circuits - light switch, elec. points etc etc, all can be turned off separately, and then we have an outside trip switch which turns the whole lot off - and it is this that went. We just went back outside and turned it back on again - but nothing had blown - so not sure why it went off.
The electrics are probably about 20 years old - as had it rewired then.
The electrics are probably about 20 years old - as had it rewired then.
Good point. Outside lamps are often the problem.
I'm really intrigued about having to go "outside" to operate a switch. Do you mean outside in the rain, or in a lobby outside your flat/house?
(An RCD is a Residual Current Device. It detects only leakage to earth (for your safety). It doesn't detect overload or short circuit. Your fuses/circuit breakers do that.)
Can you describe the switch?
I'm really intrigued about having to go "outside" to operate a switch. Do you mean outside in the rain, or in a lobby outside your flat/house?
(An RCD is a Residual Current Device. It detects only leakage to earth (for your safety). It doesn't detect overload or short circuit. Your fuses/circuit breakers do that.)
Can you describe the switch?
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