IMPEDANCE is the magic wordOk the external fault loop impedance. The earth conductor, the transformer and the incoming line conductor.
I now see the importance of following the test sequence, and I now understand what people were trying to tell me all along. I feel very foolish. Thank you for explaining this to me in such an instructive mannerThe mere fact that your tester will not do the test, should indicate to you that something is wrong, fortunately with the tester indicating the problem you do not need to test for polarity unless you wish to confirm the testers indications.
Sorry you are correct, impedance accounts for capacitance and inductance and is the correct word to use when talking about AC circuitsIMPEDANCE is the magic word
its a world away from resistance
Ok so now we have your focus, please review the posts and establish the guidance you were given. Do you have a GN3? If so it would be worthwhile refreshing your memory on its contents, this is key to your development. You may even now be able to enlighten the two that you work with with your new found learning.
I am glad i joined this forum. Started me off on a good foot. I will follow the testing procedure by the word in future at the start off any fault finding job and go from thereNever ever overestimate the basics,
I'd say >80% of the faults I attend after others are very very basic problems that previous sparks had overlooked in their wisdom to find that complicated issue
I now see the importance of following the test sequence, and I now understand what people were trying to tell me all along. I feel very foolish. Thank you for explaining this to me in such an instructive manner
Yes I have a copy of guidance note 3, I have read it. I will re-read it again too. Maybe the electricians I am working with are not good at fault finding. They are good electricians though
One question, if a nail did bridge line and earth, would earth gain the same potential as the line?
Stringy75, without wishing to mince words, for you to admit that you feel foolish takes some balls! And I will say without fear of embarrassment or contradiction that this forum really does want to help anyone who is asking a genuine problem and is also willing to listen. Possibly a stumbling block in your understanding of this problem is that C&G courses cover Installation, Understanding of Regs, Inspection & testing. But there is no standard C&G course to cover good practice at fault finding.
One key bit of guidance I would say to you is this:- Electricity can kill a healthy adult in less than half a second. The fundamental principal that 99% of installations that we come across in the UK is by using ADS (automatic disconnection) to remove the power in the event of a fault.,This relies upon low earth fault loop impedance paths, good earthing and bonding and correct polarity. So any new job you are working on, be it installing, inspecting or fault finding, you want to be sure that the Earth, bonding, polarity, Ze are all good. As it could save your life not just your customer.
Almost always the first thing you need to find on any job is the location of the CU / Distribution board. While identifying the isolation points for any circuits you need to work on, check out that earthing and bonding are good. Verify Polarity while you are checking that your voltage tester is working OK prior to checking any circuit you are about to work on is dead. Think of a possible worst case scenario you could have on your installation such as, all exposed metal parts become live and customer gets a fatal electric shock while you are there. How can you prevent this? Checking earthing, bonding and polarity is a very good staring point, because if these are wrong MCB's, RCD's & RCBO's, (or the main fuse), may not do their job correctly.
Also there are quite a few electricians who are the dogs danglies at installing and following wiring diagrams. But they don't have a clue about fault finding or inspection & testing.
Doc H.
6
Not on TT, it was a TN-C-S system. 100 amps would trip an MCB but i don't think it would trip in 0.4 seconds. Would it not need 160A to trip in 0.4 seconds on a type B MCB. 32 x 5 = 160. The bimetallic strip would trigger the trip in a short time, not sure how long it would take the solenoid to trip it though, if at all. So what would happen to the voltage in a short circuit, if earth didn't gain a potential of line, would line drop it's potential to earth, or would both stay at the same potential? Would at the point of the short circuit the potential be half of each and closer to the ends of the conductors be 230 and 0?Not if the other end of the CPC IS attached to electrical earth. Say 0.35 or 0.8 ohms. Or imagine you had 2ohms through live (+nail) to earth, I=V/R. 230v/2ohms = 115Amps. (you weren't on a TT installation were you?). Do you not think that a 32A MCB would trip with 100+ Amps flowing?
Doc H
Please enlighten us. How do YOU test Ze? What instrument? how many probes connected to where? What would your particular tester do if it detected reverse polarity?Testing Ze does not prove polarity, Ze is the resistance of the incoming earth. Dead testing is not just testing the resistance of the incoming earth. The continuity dead tests prove polarity of the internal circuits and the polarity live test proves the polarity of the incoming supply. You are really embarrassing yourselves
It had been re-wired, the "electrician" who installed it would not go back, some kind of falling out. It is the worst job I have ever seen. Everything is just chock blocked and not even taped. The guy I am working for was called in because people were getting shocks from sockets, the sockets are not screwed to the back boxes
No there is no working earth, the earth has a potential of 238V in respect to Neutral
Very valid, but neon screwdrivers are out of fashion. People are worried about the tiny current that passes through you when they light up, and the infinitely small possibility that if two components in the screwdriver both failed short circuit, that you would then get a real electric shock.Why cannot you verify polarity with a simple neon screwdriver
Isolate installation..
then
1, Step one; Stand on the ground
2, Step two, Stick said screw driver on the "phase" conductor.. It lights up?? GOOD!!! It don't???? Step three then..
3, Step three: Stick said screwdriver on the "neutral" conductor.. It lights up?? BAD!!! [Very bad!!]
john..
Sorry to say it John,Why cannot you verify polarity with a simple neon screwdriver
Isolate installation..
then
1, Step one; Stand on the ground
2, Step two, Stick said screw driver on the "phase" conductor.. It lights up?? GOOD!!! It don't???? Step three then..
3, Step three: Stick said screwdriver on the "neutral" conductor.. It lights up?? BAD!!! [Very bad!!]
john..
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