Sb8389

~
Nov 18, 2012
167
25
103
Nottingham
If you're a qualified, trainee, or retired electrician - Which country is it that your work will be / is / was aimed at?
United Kingdom
What type of forum member are you?
Electrical Engineer (Qualified)
Hi guys,
might make myself look stupid here
when wanting to carry out an IR test on a lighting circuit and you have sensitive equipment that you can't disconnect,if you do an IR test linking L-N to Earth is this basically the same as testing L-N.
the reason I'm asking is because I have an issue on a job where a customer is saying they are having an issue with there lights randomly tripping the MCB. I have already IR tested L-E and N-E and both came in at around 3.6meg, so I'm just curious if it's worth doing an L-N test and disconnect all loads

thanks for any replies
 
Testing LN-E just makes it so there's no imbalance between L and N so it shouldn't cause any damage, however if you have tripping I'd disconnect all loads and blast it with a trillion vaults
 
If it's randomly tripping what makes you think it ls a L-N IR issue?
Have you looked at the type of lights connected to the circuit and fully discussed the symptoms with the customer?
 
Hi guys,
might make myself look stupid here 
when wanting to carry out an IR test on a lighting circuit and you have sensitive equipment that you can't disconnect,if you do an IR test linking L-N to Earth is this basically the same as testing L-N.
the reason I'm asking is because I have an issue on a job where a customer is saying they are having an issue with there lights randomly tripping the MCB. I have already IR tested L-E and N-E and both came in at around 3.6meg, so I'm just curious if it's worth doing an L-N test and disconnect all loads

thanks for any replies

No, it is testing between the live conductors & earth.

Testing between line & Neutral is testing between the live conductors.
 
if it's the MCB that's tripping, then it's either

1. intermittent short circuit

2. " " overload

3. lamps blowing and taking the MCB out due to surge current.
 
Hi guys,
might make myself look stupid here 
when wanting to carry out an IR test on a lighting circuit and you have sensitive equipment that you can't disconnect,if you do an IR test linking L-N to Earth is this basically the same as testing L-N.
the reason I'm asking is because I have an issue on a job where a customer is saying they are having an issue with there lights randomly tripping the MCB. I have already IR tested L-E and N-E and both came in at around 3.6meg, so I'm just curious if it's worth doing an L-N test and disconnect all loads

thanks for any replies


What make you think it is an IR problem? if it was me I would check the current being drawn on the particular circuit in question, it could be that the circuit is working on the limit of the OCPD and trips randomly when someone say, swotches an extra light on, try it and see, you might be lucky.
 

Similar threads

OFFICIAL SPONSORS

Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Electrician Courses Green Electrical Goods PCB Way Electric Underfloor Heating Electrician Courses Heating 2 Go Electrician Workwear Supplier
These Official Forum Sponsors May Provide Discounts to Regular Forum Members - If you would like to sponsor us then CLICK HERE and post a thread with who you are, and we'll send you some stats etc

Advert

YOUR Unread Posts

Daily, weekly or monthly email

Thread starter

Joined
Location
Nottingham
If you're a qualified, trainee, or retired electrician - Which country is it that your work will be / is / was aimed at?
United Kingdom
What type of forum member are you?
Electrical Engineer (Qualified)

Thread Information

Title
IR testing
Prefix
N/A
Forum
UK Electrical Forum
Start date
Last reply date
Replies
6

Advert

Thread statistics

Created
Sb8389,
Last reply from
varilite,
Replies
6
Views
1,863

Advert