My son, who currently rents his house, asked me to come and inspect his instantaneous electric shower as it has recently started to smell "fishy".
He had looked at the shower which seems to be OK and the main ceiling isolator.
This is the source of the smell. The last 3 cms of the "live" core to the T+E is charred with the copper core obviously black and oxidised.
The shower is fed from an RCD protected way and a 40 amp mcb. Though I am not sure of the model the shower is a 10.5 kw triton shower that looks fairly new. He tells me it was installed by the landlord when the bathroom was revamped prior to them moving in about 18 months ago. It certainly looked that new.
It would appear thet the cable feeding the shower is only 6 mm2. I do not have the dimensions to hand ( I had no vernieer caliper with me) but the earth is definitely single core and the line and neutral are multicore ( and in the old colours.
The "fusebox seems modernish I would guess 10 to 15 years old. It is a "split load unit with the main isolator and 2 of 6amp mcb on one side and the rest of the house rcd protected by a single rcd.
The shower mcb seems to be of the =same vintage as the rest of the "fusebox".
SO what to do.
First off:
Isolate the circuit (already done!!) and having checked for dead, replace the ceiling shower isolator (currently rated at 45 amp) with an MK 50 amp device. There is plenty of slack in the cable where it enters from the loft to shorten the feed cable and remove the obviously heat damaged end.
THEN do I:
i) Keep quiet about what appears to be an overloaded circuit
or
ii) Insist that he tells the landlord to change the cable and protection device (or the shower!!).
Is it possible to tell whether the cable has been damaged elsewhere by the long term overload that appears to have taken place?
Many thanks
He had looked at the shower which seems to be OK and the main ceiling isolator.
This is the source of the smell. The last 3 cms of the "live" core to the T+E is charred with the copper core obviously black and oxidised.
The shower is fed from an RCD protected way and a 40 amp mcb. Though I am not sure of the model the shower is a 10.5 kw triton shower that looks fairly new. He tells me it was installed by the landlord when the bathroom was revamped prior to them moving in about 18 months ago. It certainly looked that new.
It would appear thet the cable feeding the shower is only 6 mm2. I do not have the dimensions to hand ( I had no vernieer caliper with me) but the earth is definitely single core and the line and neutral are multicore ( and in the old colours.
The "fusebox seems modernish I would guess 10 to 15 years old. It is a "split load unit with the main isolator and 2 of 6amp mcb on one side and the rest of the house rcd protected by a single rcd.
The shower mcb seems to be of the =same vintage as the rest of the "fusebox".
SO what to do.
First off:
Isolate the circuit (already done!!) and having checked for dead, replace the ceiling shower isolator (currently rated at 45 amp) with an MK 50 amp device. There is plenty of slack in the cable where it enters from the loft to shorten the feed cable and remove the obviously heat damaged end.
THEN do I:
i) Keep quiet about what appears to be an overloaded circuit
or
ii) Insist that he tells the landlord to change the cable and protection device (or the shower!!).
Is it possible to tell whether the cable has been damaged elsewhere by the long term overload that appears to have taken place?
Many thanks