I've just installed a set of LV kitchen downlighters as a spur from the lighting circuit. This was all very easy, nothing too challenging for an advanced DIY'er.
The problem arose when I wired up to provide their own switch to an existing wall box. The exisiting switch was earthed ok, so I didn't need to add an extra earth, especially so as the lights dont require earth.
But having routed out for a 3 core cable down the wall to reach this switch, I thought I'd make use of an extra earth. At the other end it connects into the Earth of the lighting ring, at the switch end it earths the metal box along with the earth that was there already.
When both earths are connected BANG goes the 5amp fuse. When the existing earth is left alone, OK, all works fine. When the new earth is connected alone (old earth disconnected), OK, all works fine.
I've checked as much wire as I can see to try and find a fault, but everything looks fine. If either one of the earths had a problem then surely that would blow the fuse, so why is it only when both earths are connected?
Can anyone help define the problem?
The problem arose when I wired up to provide their own switch to an existing wall box. The exisiting switch was earthed ok, so I didn't need to add an extra earth, especially so as the lights dont require earth.
But having routed out for a 3 core cable down the wall to reach this switch, I thought I'd make use of an extra earth. At the other end it connects into the Earth of the lighting ring, at the switch end it earths the metal box along with the earth that was there already.
When both earths are connected BANG goes the 5amp fuse. When the existing earth is left alone, OK, all works fine. When the new earth is connected alone (old earth disconnected), OK, all works fine.
I've checked as much wire as I can see to try and find a fault, but everything looks fine. If either one of the earths had a problem then surely that would blow the fuse, so why is it only when both earths are connected?
Can anyone help define the problem?
