I am not an electrician, nor do I intend to be and I'll be getting a qualified electrician to look at this next week. But, my curiosity has got the better of me so I thought I would ask my questions here.
If you have a look at my CU unit shown in the picture above, you can see a charred wire near the right hand side of the picture. The trip switch did throw itself but only after suprising amounts of smoke.
I've removed the offending wire from the MCB (and insulated as appropriate) with the idea that when I turn the power back on, I'll find some sockets or appliances without power and so I'll know where the problem lies. But strangely, I've turned the power back on, and nothing is off. Everything is working fine. Would anybody be able to explain why? The house is fairly new (10 years old) so I wouldn't expect any redundant wiring. The MCB in question is simply labelled 'Sockets', yet it seems to supply power to the garage and shed also. Is this normal practice? Seems a little suspect to me?..
If you have a look at my CU unit shown in the picture above, you can see a charred wire near the right hand side of the picture. The trip switch did throw itself but only after suprising amounts of smoke.
I've removed the offending wire from the MCB (and insulated as appropriate) with the idea that when I turn the power back on, I'll find some sockets or appliances without power and so I'll know where the problem lies. But strangely, I've turned the power back on, and nothing is off. Everything is working fine. Would anybody be able to explain why? The house is fairly new (10 years old) so I wouldn't expect any redundant wiring. The MCB in question is simply labelled 'Sockets', yet it seems to supply power to the garage and shed also. Is this normal practice? Seems a little suspect to me?..
