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Dodgy trade pictures for your amusement! - 1 Million Views!

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Darkwood

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Right ... Just been nudged to set this up by Paul.M and sounds a good idea following recent threads I've done in the Arms..

Rules....No Offensive material... edit if required before posting as this is the public arena.
Anything to do with the trade or in and around it ...H&S pic's welcome.

Beware plumbers!!!.jpg

I've posted this a few times and this is at a mates house following a kitchen refirb several yrs ago. :eek:mg_smile:

Beware plumbers!!!.jpg
 
I would also be looking at that oven again as that leakage is way too high, Should be around 1 mA or 1 mA/kW of rated power

RCD with a rated operating current of 30 mA, the maximum leakage current is 9 mA
I am unsure of what else to test on it.

The element is fine both resistance wise and visually inspecting it. The bulb housing is also fine (had this once before where the ceramic holder had deteriorated and the light contacts would expand when heating up and cause a trip). Checked the leakage and it seemed the main culprit was when the temp was set. But all the connections are fine and nothing is loose.

I genuinely mean this, if you have anything further I can test/check then please let me know.
 
I am unsure of what else to test on it.

The element is fine both resistance wise and visually inspecting it. The bulb housing is also fine (had this once before where the ceramic holder had deteriorated and the light contacts would expand when heating up and cause a trip). Checked the leakage and it seemed the main culprit was when the temp was set. But all the connections are fine and nothing is loose.

I genuinely mean this, if you have anything further I can test/check then please let me know.
Why not try with the element disconnected to rule out everything else.
 
There was a bit of a discussion on here the other week about elements and the way they fail etc.
Did you IR test ?.

 
Well this is a new one.

I was there to quote for another job. Moved the cables to see the entry to the building and they sparked.

Bit of investigation and found 244v down the armour….😳. What is worse is it’s feeding an outdoor socket with no RCD!

I’ve disabled and made it safe for now. Customer is weighing up wether to get the other ‘electrician’ back or just get me to sort it when I sort the other job I’m quoting for.

Switched off MCB is the supplying OCPD. No RCD protection, yet they use a RCBO for the other socket near the board. 🤷🏼‍♂️

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Burned out socket with an extra hole drilled for a woodscrew?

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Fixed to chipboard wall without backbox.

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That's a water pipe with an extra 2.5 t+e, by passing that original plastic back box, spurred off to somewhere.
It seems the plastic pipe's been shoved down the cavity and gone through the cable bunch.
 
A few different jobs for these.

Office complex. Been asked to add additional sockets. Network engineers had just finished their work. Guess they don’t pay attention to 528.1. 🙄

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I wouldn’t mind but the dado trunking has seperate compartments to keep data and power seperate. Especially when it’s standard unshielded cat 5e cable.

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This next was a call out. Owner was putting up a curtain rail and drilled straight though a light cable.



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This last one is a brand new near £600k house. Owner got the keys from the developer a week ago. Seems the NICEIC approved contractor likes to use impact drivers. Video shows 2 of the 6 MCBs with broken terminal screws 🙄

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These breakers on the right supply a 400V heater and the local lighting to an area housing a compressor and a load of conveyors. The main breaker is supplying the compressor.
Lovely work piggybacking off the live side to feed those. I’m at a loss why this is appropriate. The guy who installed this lot was South African, is this a way of doing things over there? There are multiple instances of this across the site.
So when the compressor is isolated in the switch room for maintenance the local light and heating is lost 😂
There’s a perfectly good fuseboard about 20m along the wall he could have used. I’ve never understood people doing things like this
 

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These breakers on the right supply a 400V heater and the local lighting to an area housing a compressor and a load of conveyors. The main breaker is supplying the compressor.
Lovely work piggybacking off the live side to feed those. I’m at a loss why this is appropriate. The guy who installed this lot was South African, is this a way of doing things over there? There are multiple instances of this across the site.
So when the compressor is isolated in the switch room for maintenance the local light and heating is lost 😂
There’s a perfectly good fuseboard about 20m along the wall he could have used. I’ve never understood people doing things like this
Not sure that I see a big problem here.
Surely you can isolate the compressor either with the breaker on the left or possibly a rotary isolator is fixed to the machine?
 
So the done thing when you need to design a supply to a new circuit is to just connect it to the nearest electrical equipment you can, rather than to a fuseboard and have it on its own circuit?
When I was an electrical installer my QS would have had kittens if he’d seen me doing things like this.
 
So the done thing when you need to design a supply to a new circuit is to just connect it to the nearest electrical equipment you can, rather than to a fuseboard and have it on its own circuit?
When I was an electrical installer my QS would have had kittens if he’d seen me doing things like this.
But it depends what the requirement is, if it is to have all the equipment in one particular area to have a single point of isolation, then in makes sense.

Having multiple points of isolation for the same area is often an issue on some sites.

It doesn't look like they picked a random supply, but a standard methodology for the site.
 
It isn’t standard methodology. In the 20 years I’ve been an industrial electrician I have never connected a new circuit to the nearest equipment. No labels on the enclosure or the equipment, nothing.
The De mister tripped a few months ago, no one had any idea where it was fed from. Searched for ages. Turns out there was a random floating breaker in the enclosure of a 63A socket outlet next to the RCD, which was about 20m from the unit. Which was only 5m away from a fuseboard. Utter laziness.
 
Bit of background for this.

Shop owner asked for a quote to install an air curtain a few weeks ago. So sent the quote with the intention to install it on a 20A DP switch and a dedicated circuit as it’s 3033w when running.

Owner rejected the quote as had been given a cheaper quote from another ‘electrician’ who’d told them it just needed to be put on a 13a plug. 🤔

‘Le electrician extraordinaire’ took a spur from a nearby socket and put a 2g plug in for a drinks machine and the air curtain.

Got a call last night asking if I could come and have a look at it as it was smoking. They’d turned the power off and left it.

Went this morning and found this…

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It’s now installed properly on a dedicated circuit with a 20A DP switch. 😇
 

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