What can I use

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I am not a sparky.

However I suspect an electrical issue maybe occurring in a supply to an out building where part of an alarm system is housed.

It’s only the part in this out building that’s affected.

It could be the switch mode power supply doesn’t like the feed comming in and it’s being upset for around 40 seconds in the early hours of the morning.

So far one event 1:45 am a few days later 3:35 am both lasting around 40 seconds.

Anything I can use to monitor Viktsge current and frequency using clamps that can record the data for a week or so that is under £100?
 
Anything I can use to monitor Viktsge current and frequency using clamps that can record the data for a week or so that is under £100?

Yes, assuming you have a laptop. Buy a cheap USB analogue to digital converter. (AKA “USB Oscilloscope”.) Less than £50 on eBay and probably even less on AliExpress. Connect one channel to a current transformer (with a shunt resistor I guess??), and the other to measure the voltage a suitable normal (voltage) transformer.

Then I guess the challenge is whether the supplied software will record for very long periods.
 
No. Even to hire such a thing for a week would be far more than £100.


okay money no object whats the cheapest way of doing this buying or hiring.

seen somethings on line that arent mega expensive but not sure how good they will be and how good I need them to be, to be fair
 
Yes, assuming you have a laptop. Buy a cheap USB analogue to digital converter. (AKA “USB Oscilloscope”.) Less than £50 on eBay and probably even less on AliExpress. Connect one channel to a current transformer (with a shunt resistor I guess??), and the other to measure the voltage a suitable normal (voltage) transformer.

Then I guess the challenge is whether the supplied software will record for very long periods.

okay this gives me some ideas I can look into
 
20 quid?

Screenshot_20260610_200423_eBay.jpg
 
Obviously being a security engineer? You’ve checked for frayed connections and a poor battery? What’s the supply voltage? Maybe vermin?
 
I am aware there has been issue to this building in the past, which have been sorted allegedly, I have dug deeper remotely and now have a chain of events leading up to this problems which is almost certainly the start of the chain reaction, just hasn't recovered like the rest of the system, so wondering if there is still an issue with power to this building. It starts with a Tesla power wall replacement in the main house. I want to go prepared for the what if based on what I do already know about the history of the property. For example they were having trips for the outbuilding and not the rest of the house, this was highlighted by the alarm system reporting.(customer new to this abode and system was inherited).

I am wondering what killed the powerwall.

Theoretically the system protects the battery from a complete destructive breakdown and the log didn't register a battery fault or low and they are pretty reliable on that reporting. I am happy with what started the chain of events, just the recovery that's of concern at the minute. but a 40 second issue at early hours of the morning days apart isn't so easy to get to the bottom of, similar time too. so likely to be a system doing something, hence wanting to monitor the mains.

Battery was tested when it was installed but it has been subjected to a fair bit of stress with the power issue that I am aware of, so it might not be as good as it should be.
 

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