God knows how long there has been a break in the loop. I'm guessing I could have had a break for years and not been detected?
Which seems to confirm, the EICR, was a drive-by EICR.
God knows how long there has been a break in the loop. I'm guessing I could have had a break for years and not been detected?

www.kewtechcorp.com
1. As an electrician. How would you tell for sure a circuit is a ring or radial?
Yes, but only IF it IS a ring.In the case of a ring, the L+N+E begin at the consumer unit, MCB, go to every socket on the ring, then back to the same MCB. That's why it's called a ring, a full circle, out, and back. So their should be two reds (or browns), connected to the MCB. A basic check, to check that the ring has not been broken, is to take out those two wires, and check if there is continuity between them. You would also check the N and the E, for continuity.... No continuity, indicates a break in the ring somewhere.
A radial could have two browns (or reds) originating from the MCB Hence if there are two conductors at the MCB and testing shows no continuity between them that indicates that there is a broken ring OR that is is a radial circuit. With no other information, one could not tell which of those possibilities was the case.
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