Yesterday I was rewiring a part of the lighting circuit. At some point I re-enabled the power at the consumer unit to the lighting circuit, then flicked the switch that controls power to the bit of the circuit I changed. At this point the MCB and RCD both tripped. (I accidentally introduced a short-circuit).
Afterwards, the switch was stuck in the on position, and wouldn't snap back into the off position. Externally (on both the face and the inside) the switch plate looked fine - as in, I didn't notice any visible damage.
This morning I tried again, and was able to flick the switch back and forth between the on and off positions with no problem.
I'm minded to replace the switch anyway, as it seems the safer option, but can anyone guess what might have happened internally in the switch that prevented it from moving between the on and off positions?
I should add that it's a standard 2 gang 2 way (10A I believe?) light switch.
Afterwards, the switch was stuck in the on position, and wouldn't snap back into the off position. Externally (on both the face and the inside) the switch plate looked fine - as in, I didn't notice any visible damage.
This morning I tried again, and was able to flick the switch back and forth between the on and off positions with no problem.
I'm minded to replace the switch anyway, as it seems the safer option, but can anyone guess what might have happened internally in the switch that prevented it from moving between the on and off positions?
I should add that it's a standard 2 gang 2 way (10A I believe?) light switch.