Discuss Time to get the megger out! in the Periodic Inspection Reporting & Certification area at ElectriciansForums.net

N

Nocker

Had a problem on a workshop lighting circuit at my new firm. I am the only electrician there so i can't bounce off anyone.

The circuit is fed from a 32 way square D consumer unit and has roughly 10/12 double fluorescent tube fittings on the 10a type C breaker.

The breaker is is feeding a one way switch which operates the lights.

Breaker will switch on okay until a load is put on the circuit by operating the one way switch and then will not reset.

I have so far disconnected every tube and starter from each fitting and i am still getting the breaker tripping with everything removed.

I have only ever tested domestic circuits before so i would just like to ask anyone who can help is the process the same on a 32 way just testing 1 circuit?

Also if anyone could think from previous experience what kind of problem could be causing this?

Also would the ballast in each fitting need to be disconnected before pumping 500 meg through them.

I can see myself full of dust, ****e and ceiling tiles in my eyeballs tomorrow.

Oh the joys!
 
Agreed sounds like a faulty ballast. I would tend to go to the mid point and split the circuit thus trying to cut down the area involved.
 
prob be a faulty ballast! fault finding is fault finding domestic or commercial both same . break down circuit etc you maybe able to find it by smelling the fittings lol a burnt out ballast has quite a disstictive smell! let us know how u get on!
sounds like a 3 ph db so be careful 400v is not very forgiving!lol
 
check in each fitting that cables have not been run internally, alongside the ballast. have seen a few burnt cables from this.
 
Does indeed sound like a burnt out ballast, but don't dismiss the fact that it could be a damaged cable inside the conduit. May be worth sticking your nose against each unit, you may get lucky and smell the unit with the faulty ballast.
 
As already sid, but I would add two things.

1) Before sniffing around make sure the ceiling tiles and pipe lagging etc aren't asbestos.
2) Before sniffing light fittings make sure no one else is around. Otherwise you'll look a right berk.
 
In the op it is stated that the mcb trips with everything disconnected so why would it be a ballast? My money would be on an accessory screw piercing insulation or as said in a previous post cables in conduit rubbing on a fitting. Has anyone done any electrical work in the route of the cables.

No-one wouild see him sniffing, its dark!!
 
In the op it is stated that the mcb trips with everything disconnected so why would it be a ballast? My money would be on an accessory screw piercing insulation or as said in a previous post cables in conduit rubbing on a fitting. Has anyone done any electrical work in the route of the cables.

No-one wouild see him sniffing, its dark!!

As mackers says, he has only removed tubes and starter, not delved into the guts of each unit :)
 
Breaker will switch on okay until a load is put on the circuit by operating the one way switch and then will not reset.

I have so far disconnected every tube and starter from each fitting and i am still getting the breaker tripping with everything removed

if you remove the tubes and starters then all that is left is the wiring or the ballast. The supply to the fitting goes to the ballast first so there could still be a faulty ballast causing a short. The wiring may also be the problem.
 
prob be a faulty ballast! fault finding is fault finding domestic or commercial both same . break down circuit etc you maybe able to find it by smelling the fittings lol a burnt out ballast has quite a disstictive smell! let us know how u get on!
sounds like a 3 ph db so be careful 400v is not very forgiving!lol

Your right it aint very forgiving but it aint half good at removing eyebrows when it goes wrong,as i know from experience lol.
 

Reply to Time to get the megger out! in the Periodic Inspection Reporting & Certification area at ElectriciansForums.net

Similar Threads

Hi all. We have a 120v 20 amp circuit to an accessory dwelling with a run of about 75' of direct bury #12. The breaker keeps tripping even when...
Replies
3
Views
315
Summary (TL;DR) Several lightbulbs in my home supplied by one circuit breaker dim over time and go out in about a year. Right now, the ceiling...
Replies
0
Views
740
I'm practising EICRs on friendly locations as I'm still in training - technically done my 2391-52 but frankly need loads more practise. I've just...
Replies
11
Views
873
I’ve got bad ballasts and am replacing the T12 fluorescent bulbs with Halco direct wire, double ended T8 LEDs. The fixture has 4Rapid start bulbs...
Replies
0
Views
606
DIY query Have narrowed down the source of an occasional trip to one light circuit which is a varilight v-pro master dimmer slave set up. This...
Replies
0
Views
439

OFFICIAL SPONSORS

Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Electrician Courses Green Electrical Goods PCB Way Electrical Goods - Electrical Tools - Brand Names Pushfit Wire Connectors Electric Underfloor Heating Electrician Courses
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

YOUR Unread Posts

This website was designed, optimised and is hosted by Untold Media. Operating under the name Untold Media since 2001.
Back
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website. For the best site experience please disable your AdBlocker.

I've Disabled AdBlock