The K M Links Game - March 2025 Week 3
Quizzes & Puzzles2 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by Kathyan. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If it has been brought to the attention of the householder that the trip needs upgrading then this should be done as an urgent matter of safety. Do not leave it.
I think what is refered to here is an old voltage operated earth leakage circuit breaker (ELCB). These are very much out of date and I'd be surprised if it was still working. They weren't that reliable in the first place and with changes to earthing practices and plastic water pipes etc. it is unlikely to now be even wired properly.
A modern current operated RCD should be installed as should modern earthing cables in addition to any other work needed to ensure the installation is as safe as it can be. If you are still operating an old out of date system then you run the risk of electric shock and fire.
This is definitely not the sort of work for a diy person without a proper knowledge of electrical installations and does not come under maintenance. If you attempted this work you would have to inform the power company to disconnect the supply to the old trip. You then have to inform building control before starting work and then have the installation checked for compliance and a certificate issued before it could all be reconnected to the power.
I think you've got your wires crossed Chris. Anything connected to the meter outlet is the consumers responsibility unless it belongs to the supplier like a night rate timeswitch. An ELCB or RCD belongs to the consumer. These can both be connected before the consumer unit and only RCDs can be inside the unit, they are never connected before the EB meter.
An ELCB or later RCD was originally used with overhead supplies or otherwise where there was no suppliers earth. RCDs are now commonly used even where there is an earth as a means of shock protection to earth.
Miniature circuit breakers are not there for shock protection which is usually to earth, they are there to prevent a circuit overload in the same way as fuses. Fuses are still alive and well in Europe. A residual current circuit breaker will trip very quickly if it detects a fault to earth on either the live or neutral line of its circuit but not if it is only across the live and neutral where there is no way of protection from electric shock.
What should be appreciated is that installations should be inspected every few years for safety and compliance with current electrical regulations. This at the present time is not compulsory and unfortunatley leads to many installations becoming unsafe and non-compliant by neglect and DIY alteration. You don't know if it ain't broke unless it is inspected, and you do something about it. As you said Chris, leave it to the experts, next time you might not be so lucky, many aren't!
As what was said previously by Chris and Stanleyman, if the consumer unit does require changing, and going by the sounds of it it does, from a safety point of view it would be advisable to replace it.
If the consumer unit is connected directly to the meter you will need to contact your local electricity supply company. These will hopefully F.O.C fit you a double pole isolater between the meter and your consumer unit so that the supply can be made not live whilst the work is carried out.
It is illegal for any one to remove the seals from either the meter or main fuse! as this could be viewed as you are trying to abstract electricity without payment.
Going by the age of your consumer unit it could possibly require your main cutout and probably incoming cable to be replaced as well.
This should also be F.O.C unless you require it to be relocated.
Andy
I have just had a conservatory built and the electrical sub-contractor to the conservatory company has said that we need a new consumer unit fitted as the new legislation says that new ground floor sockets have to be connected to a rcd/mcb unit. The company concerned have given us the following quotation, "Replace the exsiting consumer unit with a new RCD/MCB unit and meter tails to provide RCD protection to 13 amp socket outlets.
Carry out all necessary supplementary bonding to comply with regulations.
Test all existing circuits and connect to new consumer unit.
Provide completion certificate for the above works.
Cost �403.56 plus VAT."
Two questions; is this a reasonable price?
Can a RCD/MCB unit be fitted to the circuit serving the new sockets only?
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