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  1. R

    Is this faulty wiring ?

    Looks like the yellow wire links the neutral terminals of the two meters but I could be wrong.
  2. R

    What sort of earthing do I have?

    As plugwash said, large parts of Europe used non-earthed sockets in dry rooms until fairly recent times, e.g. the Netherlands, Scandinavia and Finland. In these countries it was and partly still is considered an acceptable upgrade to fit an RCD without adding CPCs to all circuits. In other...
  3. R

    What sort of earthing do I have?

    I‘d read 415.1.2 as „if there are no CPCs an RCD is not enough to make the installation comply“. Apparently in some countries that used to be an option. It’s definitely not a UK-specific reg, I‘ve seen it elsewhere too.
  4. R

    Tripping ELCB?

    Sometimes a fridge or freezer can be enough to trip an RCD with an N-E fault. Depending on the supply it doesn‘t take a lot of current to cause enough of an imbalance. My first experience with N-E faults was a rural TT supply with a 100 mA RCD from the late 70s and occasionally during heavy...
  5. R

    UK shaver plug Rewireable

    All German plugs have the same pin spacing and length, including the Euro plug. Only the diametre is different, 4 mm for Euro and ancient 6 A plugs (only designed for class 0 appliances, won‘t fit modern sockets) and 4.8 mm for all others. That non-earthed plug is essentially the common ancestor...
  6. R

    Twin & Earth Outdoors - how to protect it?

    Nope, even a 1920s motor that spent pretty much the last 60-odd years sitting unused in a basement along with original VIR cables came in at 150k.
  7. R

    Twin & Earth Outdoors - how to protect it?

    As I said, I pulled the extension lead off the fence 15 years ago and have been using it for various tasks around the house ever since. I‘m definitely aware of the fact that an IR of, say, 100 kOhm would be very much unsatisfactory but still far from tripping a 30 mA RCD. That’s why I wrote...
  8. R

    Twin & Earth Outdoors - how to protect it?

    I didn‘t see any reason to do an IR test since the outer sheath was in such perfect condition but might test next time I get there out of sheer curiosity. Can’t be terrible because it didn‘t trip a recently tested 30 mA RCD but still interesting to know the actual IR value.
  9. R

    Twin & Earth Outdoors - how to protect it?

    As I said, even loosely draped (I can’t remember any details but the lead exited an old attached brick shed under the eaves, was somehow held up along the top of a timber gate but not attached to the gate itself and then ran along a brick boundary wall, mostly held in place by ivy) the flex was...
  10. R

    Twin & Earth Outdoors - how to protect it?

    When my parents bought their house in 2009 I found an extension lead (H05VV-F) strung along the fence to power a garden room, possibly since 1989. It was still in great condition so I pulled it from the fence and kept using it.
  11. R

    Domestic repair by a contractor (1)

    Frankly, in this case the repair wasn‘t that much worse than the original installation.
  12. R

    Routing lighting flex through a wall

    For 0.75 mm2 flex an 8 mm bit should be well enough.
  13. R

    2 Lamps to 1 Mains Plug

    „Naught conductor“ sounds like a good old dictionary translation of the German „Nullleiter“. The official term these days is „Neutrallleiter“ but most people still use the older term.
  14. R

    Thin singles for steel conduit

    The one thing I do find interesting is that all European countries I‘m aware of have a minimum requirement of 1.5 mm2 for mechanical strength in fixed installations (except control circuits). The UK and Ireland are the only exceptions as far as I know.
  15. R

    Outdoor lights and sockets - same or separate circuits?

    Is the current circuit on an RCD with other circuits or on its own RCBO? If the latter and it only serves laundry appliances I‘d say spurring off this circuit is fine, otherwise I‘d recommend adding an extra RCBO as JohnD suggested.
  16. R

    Thin singles for steel conduit

    For some odd reason they call a 2-way switch „3-way“ and an internediate „4-way“, just like the number of terminals.
  17. R

    Using old meter cable to shed

    Yes, insulation resistance and continuity tests should give a spark a decent idea whether the cable is good or not.
  18. R

    Using old meter cable to shed

    Can you see the cable on the other side of that wall? That would allow an electrician to cut back the frayed end and terminate properly.
  19. R

    Ceiling electrical boxes for fixtures from North America to France

    In my opinion the difference does matter, an ES27 lamp in an ES26 socket will leave much more screw thread exposed than it should. Yes, that should be connected to the neutral but you aren‘t supposed to have permanently bare neutrals either. French homes these days are required to have DCL...
  20. R

    PAT / ITEE Testing. IEC lead fuses

    Many countries using CEE 7 plugs require sockets to be protected at no more than 16 A and all extension leads to be rated at 16 A, so no amount of creative splitting could cause an overload beyond the trip curve of the MCB. There is one exception, power strips with no more than four CEE 7/16...
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