Hi. I recently had an electrical inspection and N-E faults were found on both upstairs and downstairs lighting circuits. It's a 50s house, but has been rewired in PVC wiring (March 1982 if I'm to believe the newspaper clippings next to junction boxes under the floorboards). The upstairs lighting circuit has a borrowed live conductor from the downstairs lighting circuit (two way lighting for the upstairs landing light) if that's relevant to the below.
I was wondering the best way to track down where the N-E faults are? I have a multimeter with continuity function/low ohms setting, and have done a diagram of what connects where. I was thinking turn all lights on so all the wiring is being tested, then turn both breakers for the lighting circuits off, then split the circuits at convenient locations to narrow it down and test across N-E with the multimeter? I've done this at a couple of locations and think I've ruled out several lights/switches. I did also disconnect the two lighting cables from the consumer unit at the junction box upstairs and got continuity on both between neutral and earth (this is with the power off). Is this expected for a TN-S supply - I know earth is connected to neutral all the way back at the transformer, but should I see this continuity even when everything's turned off?! If not it would seem worth testing the cables between the consumer unit and junction box individually.
I do also have an insulation resistance tester, so was going to split the circuit in the same way and take some readings that way to see what kind of condition the wiring is in, removing all the bulbs. The guy who did the inspection didn't bother to remove the bulbs for the insulation resistance test, and has put down 0.05 Ohms (a dead short I presume) for Live-Earth for both circuits.
Thanks
I was wondering the best way to track down where the N-E faults are? I have a multimeter with continuity function/low ohms setting, and have done a diagram of what connects where. I was thinking turn all lights on so all the wiring is being tested, then turn both breakers for the lighting circuits off, then split the circuits at convenient locations to narrow it down and test across N-E with the multimeter? I've done this at a couple of locations and think I've ruled out several lights/switches. I did also disconnect the two lighting cables from the consumer unit at the junction box upstairs and got continuity on both between neutral and earth (this is with the power off). Is this expected for a TN-S supply - I know earth is connected to neutral all the way back at the transformer, but should I see this continuity even when everything's turned off?! If not it would seem worth testing the cables between the consumer unit and junction box individually.
I do also have an insulation resistance tester, so was going to split the circuit in the same way and take some readings that way to see what kind of condition the wiring is in, removing all the bulbs. The guy who did the inspection didn't bother to remove the bulbs for the insulation resistance test, and has put down 0.05 Ohms (a dead short I presume) for Live-Earth for both circuits.
Thanks