About a year ago I had my old fuse box replaced with a modern distribution box (is that the right term?) which uses an mcb on each circuit.
Ever since then, whenever two particular light bulbs blow they always trip the lighting circuit mcb. The two bulbs in question are mounted horizontally in almost-flush ceiling mountings, and they're the only ones that trip the breaker when they blow. Since they never used to blow the fuses in the old box I'm presuming that this is happening because the mcbs are so much more sensitive than 5A fuse-wire.
The bulbs in question are traditional tungsten filament bulbs: I tried replacing one with an energy-saving bulb, but it blew after one hour of use -- seemingly overheated by the horizontal mounting and the relatively poor airflow.
So, is there any (safe) way I can reduce the sensitivity of the relevant mcb?
Ever since then, whenever two particular light bulbs blow they always trip the lighting circuit mcb. The two bulbs in question are mounted horizontally in almost-flush ceiling mountings, and they're the only ones that trip the breaker when they blow. Since they never used to blow the fuses in the old box I'm presuming that this is happening because the mcbs are so much more sensitive than 5A fuse-wire.
The bulbs in question are traditional tungsten filament bulbs: I tried replacing one with an energy-saving bulb, but it blew after one hour of use -- seemingly overheated by the horizontal mounting and the relatively poor airflow.
So, is there any (safe) way I can reduce the sensitivity of the relevant mcb?