Hi
I've been helping a friend out with some electrical work and issues. She was complaining about getting a slight 'buzz' from the hall lightswitch (brass finish type). I tried it and got diddley squat. I drew the line a licking it. However when I put a meter on it to earth I got about 50-60v AC and connecting it to earth I got a current of almost exactly 1 milliamp. *Theoretically* the circuit is earthed (well its got an earth wire anyway) but I'm pretty sure when I did a continuity test to a known good earth I got 'open circuit'. I fitted a new outside light anyway (LED type), metal casing also 'earthed'. This gave the same surface voltage, etc and also glowed slightly even when switched off. Hmmm.
I've 'fixed' the problem temporarily simply by running a wire from the a switch plate on the circuit to a plug earth. This has completely fixed the problem for now, removing all voltages and stopping the outside light glowing. I'm assuming this is some kind of induced voltage caused by wires running near each other. I can't see how it can be a direct short or my plates should be showing 240v not 50-60V? The 1ma drain is of course nowhere near enough to trip the 100ma house RCD.
Any thoughts on what might be happening here very welcome. Obviously there is an earth fault which needs fixing. I might find it, but if I don't is there any reason I shouldn't just make my temporary earth connection permanent? (I'm sure there is - someone will tell me where in the regs it says you can't do that . . . . ).
Thankyou !
I've been helping a friend out with some electrical work and issues. She was complaining about getting a slight 'buzz' from the hall lightswitch (brass finish type). I tried it and got diddley squat. I drew the line a licking it. However when I put a meter on it to earth I got about 50-60v AC and connecting it to earth I got a current of almost exactly 1 milliamp. *Theoretically* the circuit is earthed (well its got an earth wire anyway) but I'm pretty sure when I did a continuity test to a known good earth I got 'open circuit'. I fitted a new outside light anyway (LED type), metal casing also 'earthed'. This gave the same surface voltage, etc and also glowed slightly even when switched off. Hmmm.
I've 'fixed' the problem temporarily simply by running a wire from the a switch plate on the circuit to a plug earth. This has completely fixed the problem for now, removing all voltages and stopping the outside light glowing. I'm assuming this is some kind of induced voltage caused by wires running near each other. I can't see how it can be a direct short or my plates should be showing 240v not 50-60V? The 1ma drain is of course nowhere near enough to trip the 100ma house RCD.
Any thoughts on what might be happening here very welcome. Obviously there is an earth fault which needs fixing. I might find it, but if I don't is there any reason I shouldn't just make my temporary earth connection permanent? (I'm sure there is - someone will tell me where in the regs it says you can't do that . . . . ).
Thankyou !



