hey, any electricians on here?
I have a half Amp reading on a lighting circuit but no lights switched on.
In this circuit I have a couple of conventional lights, one 12v transformer system and 2 switch-mode power supply 12v lights plus one outdoor light (which is dry before you ask).
Am I looking at faulty insulation?
Help !
Do you mean MCB?
MCBs trip on overcurrent, and an MCB controlling a lighting circuit is normally 6A.
RCDs trip on earth leakage - the differential current between that on the Live conductor and that on the neutral. Sorry if I'm teaching Grandmothers' etc.
Hi BM, I am measuring 0.6A in line between the MCB and the circuit.
It is a 'Hager' 6A MCB.
The wiring is original with the house, built 1991.
I think the answer is to pull all the light fittings and check again. Not an easy task with kids running loose ! <gulp>
well there's got to be a fault if there's a half amp being used by a circuit with nothing switched on...
140W of power going somewhere other than a light bulb makes me think of smouldering in a wall, damp cabling or something else unwanted !
0.6 amps would make the circuit trip is it was a fault. think you may find that the pcb's in auto detect light outside and humidistat in fan etc will ammount to some current draw
what made you inline test for current draw if you dont mind me asking.
also are you using a clamp meter or inline probes. as a clamp meter does have a great deal of tollerence due to the fact it only measures the magnetic feild and not the true current flow
Are your lights switched after rather than before the transformers ?
Do you a have light in the attic that is switched from your landing and has been accidently turned on. ?
do you have a shed or garage that has a light on?
do you have a pond pump that has been tapped off the lighting circuit. ?
(and yes, i have seen this been done before)
the only way to find out is to bell out with a meter until you find the last item on the radial circuit and insulation test all the way through for piece of mind.
The MCB had tripped in the night with nothing on, I thought the MCB was possibly old and faulty so went to pull it out for testing, when I disconnected the wire it gave a good spark, so I took a current reading. It's a regular Fluke DVM I'm using.
If I go quiet for a while I'm taking all the light fittings down ... !
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