It's unlikely that a dodgy appliance on a different circuit it to blame. If the connections at the CU are fine then look for the first joint after the CU. Possibly a junction box or ceiling rose. Maybe there is a loose connection there.
JohnD said:have a listen for fizzing, and a good sniff.
stevesey said:Is it just the lighting circuit - do table lamps plugged into the ring flicker?
PaulMac07 said:Help and advice would be much appreciated.
securespark said:PaulMac07 said:Help and advice would be much appreciated.
And the last 3 pages were.....?
sparkyspike said:If, as you say, some of your neighbours were also getting flickering lights, it's worth calling up your distributor and telling them so. Especially since you had a power cut. It's unlikely you'd get a power cut from internal equipment that wasn't obvious.
RF Lighting said:You might lose power from the supplier but the house either side of you may stay on.
This is unusual, but if for example there is a bad joint on the phase which supplys your house, then it may only effect every third house on your street.
Electricity is often distributed on an underground 3 phase cable, and each house is fed in turn from a different phase.
e.g.
House 1 : L1 phase
House 2 : L2 phase
House 3 : L3 phase
House 4 : L1 phase
House 5 : L2 phase
etc...
PaulMac07 said:Our 2kw kettle really affects the frequency and intensity of the flicker during these times.
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