I was installing a new socket today and during this process I managed to blow the 30amp fuse for the circuit I was working on (no I wasn't working live, it blew when I turned the power back on). I changed the fuse wire and all was fine.
But later on, I noticed a socket was dead that was definitely not dead before I blew the 30amp fuse. Upon further inspection I discovered that this particular socket appears to be alone on a 15amp fuse, separate to the rest of the house, and that 15amp fuse had also blown presumably at the same time the 30amp fuse blew.
I don't understand how two seemingly separate circuits could blow their fuses at the same time, I thought I was only working on the 30amp circuit, could they be crossed somewhere ?
I don't think it's relevant but I'll put it out anyway, the cable supplying the socket that died is the old cable that has many different strands, I'm afraid I don't know what it's called.
But later on, I noticed a socket was dead that was definitely not dead before I blew the 30amp fuse. Upon further inspection I discovered that this particular socket appears to be alone on a 15amp fuse, separate to the rest of the house, and that 15amp fuse had also blown presumably at the same time the 30amp fuse blew.
I don't understand how two seemingly separate circuits could blow their fuses at the same time, I thought I was only working on the 30amp circuit, could they be crossed somewhere ?
I don't think it's relevant but I'll put it out anyway, the cable supplying the socket that died is the old cable that has many different strands, I'm afraid I don't know what it's called.