Socket blowing fuse

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Suet33

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Nov 16, 2023
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We are having problems with one socket which my husband has changed the front plate on. When he tried to attach the new front cover it singed the screw and blew the fuse. What could be causing this?
 
Nope - it happened as the screw touched the metal on the box - definitely no cables nearby!

I suspect your husband has placed the cables poorly in the back box and the fixing screws are causing the problem.

Take the fixing screws out and see if the problem goes away

And at the same time check he’s connected the cables to the correct terminals
 
Possible a wire has been damaged by the back box and when the cover screw touches the back box it earths it hence the fuse blows.
 
We are having problems with one socket which my husband has changed the front plate on. When he tried to attach the new front cover it singed the screw and blew the fuse. What could be causing this?

He has either terminated something wrong or damaged a cable or both would be the most likely cause.

Is it an MCB or RCD or RCBO that is tripping?
 
This sounds like as above a cable probably a live has been nicked and made the back box live , when the screw (which is earthed via the front plate) touches the now live back box the protective device will operate.
this also means that the power was not off and he lucky not to get an electric shock or worse .
this is all assumption of course but it’s my best guess from the information we have here.
 
Neutral connecting to CPC (Earth) can trip an RCD, even with the circuits breaker off.
One possibility is an earthed back box and a neutral (or indeed live) has been connected to the sockets Earth terminal by mistake.
 
If its a neutral it will not trip the rcd or RCBO until some current is drawn (though it could be as little as 30 ma if the rcd trips at 15), also it sounds like a spark occurred at the 3.5mm stud suggesting a short circuit.
this assumes its been wired correct and not live (line)to the cpc terminal and earthed back box
 
If its a neutral it will not trip the rcd or RCBO until some current is drawn (though it could be as little as 30 ma if the rcd trips at 15), also it sounds like a spark occurred at the 3.5mm stud suggesting a short circuit.
this assumes its been wired correct and not live (line)to the cpc terminal and earthed back box
Oh yes it will if there is a voltage imbalance between neutral and earth. Seen it loads of times
 
only because there is a load ,if there is no current flowing the cpc will not be able to divert current to create the imbalance .
it used to happen on the old dual (RCD) Residual Current Device boards when someone connects to the wrong neutral bar , or a shared neutral is connected across the 2 rcds
 
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