D

Darkwood

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. :omg_smile:

Beware plumbers!!!.jpg
 
Probably a lathe and plaster wall. I've used every screw hole available on many occasions, plus a bit of adhesive on the back.
Exactly this - only two of them were actually doing anything. This house has a mixture of L+P, L+P with plasterboard on top, and in one case L+P ceiling with OSB board and then ceiling-board which made fishing delightful fun...
 
Exactly this - only two of them were actually doing anything. This house has a mixture of L+P, L+P with plasterboard on top, and in one case L+P ceiling with OSB board and then ceiling-board which made fishing delightful fun...

Just rewired a house in which old tongue & groove timber was directly behind plasterboard on ceilings and stud walls. An absolute pleasure to work with.
 
Call out today as a light switch kept tripping the MCB of the circuit. So after finishing another job I called in on my way home.

I'm surmising that some hamfisted clod has knocked a nail or screw through the cable and it's failed over time. 2 of the 3 conductors had a short when IR testing.

Replaced the 2gang switch then had to go old school to pull a new piece of 3C&E through to make a temp fix. Told them they need to find where the leak is in the property and stop that before I do anything else. The back box has almost disintegrated and the wall and ceiling are damp to touch. So will be back to fit new capping and back box once they have sorted that out.

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Call out today as a light switch kept tripping the MCB of the circuit. So after finishing another job I called in on my way home.

I'm surmising that some hamfisted clod has knocked a nail or screw through the cable and it's failed over time. 2 of the 3 conductors had a short when IR testing.

Replaced the 2gang switch then had to go old school to pull a new piece of 3C&E through to make a temp fix. Told them they need to find where the leak is in the property and stop that before I do anything else. The back box has almost disintegrated and the wall and ceiling are damp to touch. So will be back to fit new capping and back box once they have sorted that out.

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And maybe a MF enclosure, you do get some lovely work though :)
 
Call out today as the RCD had tripped and wouldn't stay on. Narrowed it down to a circuit supplying a garden pond pump & shed. Traced the circuit and found this switch with a rather wet wall behind. Wish I had recorded the amount of water that came out when I undid the first screw.

Isolated the switch for now and drilled 2 x 4mm holes in the bottom to stop it filling up again and tripping the RCD. Will be back to put it all into a weather proof enclosure and route the cabling better to stop water tracking into it.

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I totally agree highly dangerous, it was on a home made extension lead with a 32a socket on the end for 'Welding round the farm' it had packed up with a large pop apparently and took out the sockets mcb.
I told them it had its last welder plugged in and was only good for the scrap bin!
 
Worked in the (13A) plug on my 180A oil filled arc welder for 30 years without any problems.
Is there a farm that didn't have one of those (Pickhill Bantam is one name I remember) ?
At one of the farms I worked at in my youth, they had need to run one some distance from a socket - so extension lead, and obligatory 1/4" bolts to replace the annoying fuses that would otherwise blow. I wasn't there to see it happen, but I saw it afterwards ...
Fairly decent quality 13A rubber trailing socket and plug - both opened up like a peeled back banana with blobs of brass on the ends of the wires. Of course, this was long before we all carried mobile phones with cameras on them.
 
Is there a farm that didn't have one of those (Pickhill Bantam is one name I remember) ?
Pickhill Bantam was the blue one, and the other was Oxford, in a tasteful shade of light green metallic.
Mine's now in semi retirement, having been replaced for most things by a Mig, but still comes out occasionally when there's heavy stuff to be welded. Fitted with a blue 32A plug now though, and doesn't trip out a 30mA RCD.
 
Ah yes, the Oxford.
Weren't some of these oil filled units "a bit dodgy" in that if you mishandled them (no, that would never happen on a farm !) the windings could distort and make the casing(?) or secondary live ?
 
Ah yes, the Oxford.
Weren't some of these oil filled units "a bit dodgy" in that if you mishandled them (no, that would never happen on a farm !) the windings could distort and make the casing(?) or secondary live ?
Can't remember the details, but mine shorted live to case once. Several bolts around the top to undo, then I lifted the innards out of the oil with an engine crane. Whatever was wrong was obvious, easily sorted and hasn't happened again.
 

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