Explain this fault then...

Yes the the neutral bar for the circuits on the right hand bar was not connected.
One assumes that those circuits were not working too well, then? :-) - or was there yet another 'cross-connection' somewhere which was allowing them to work after some fashion?

Kind Regards, JOhn.
 
SimonH2";p="2272024 said:
I didnt think any other manufacturers made stuff as cheap[quality] and cheerful as Pro-Elec.
Well I guess it would be hard :roll: But then at the price it makes a board full of RCBOs (instead of split-load RCDs) a reasonable proposition. In three boards worth (about 20 breakers), I've had one failure which isn't brilliant - but then the stuff is cheap enough for me to hold spares and it doesn't "cost" me to change one. They pass tests, so what more do you want.

Don't like the enclosures though - too flexible, and the flexible DIN rail means the front cover is partly responsible for holding the breakers in place.
I have similar thoughts, yes its cheap to buy and so far I've had no failures, we purchased 18 DB's from CPC to do a temp job which cropped up out of the blue about 3 years ago, they have been reused a few times now and are holding up well, probably because they are very flexible. I also have maybe 50 Pro Elec CEE form connectors but don't buy any more as they are not up to it.
 

If you need to find a tradesperson to get your job done, please try our local search below, or if you are doing it yourself you can find suppliers local to you.

Select the supplier or trade you require, enter your location to begin your search.


Are you a trade or supplier? You can create your listing free at DIYnot Local

 
Back
Top