Hi there. I'm hoping that someone out there will be able to advise me.
Last night I plugged the vacuum cleaner into a double wall socket. A lamp was plugged into the other half. As soon as I switched the vacuum cleaner on, the lamp went out (the vacuum cleaner wouldn't work either). Probably a fuse I thought. However all the other sockets and lights were fine. I used my socket tester which showed that there was a neutral fault. My power detector seemed to back this up and registered a current when I ran it up the wall. Given that all the other sockets and lights were fine, I assumed that the problem must be with the socket itself. However, upon checking the socket, all connections were correct and having used all my other gadgets, I'm satisfied that the socket's fine.
This particular socket did give me some trouble a couple of years ago. Sometimes it would work and sometimes it wouldn't. However, the problem seemed to sort itself out and since then, until now at least, I've not had a problem.
Now I'm not an electrician by trade (obviously) but would like to consider myself a relatively capable DIY enthusiast. Even so, this has me stumped. It was clearly the sudden demand which caused the circuit to 'blow'. However, shouldn't it have been the fuse that went? As I say, I'm not an expert but I wouldn't have thought that a neutral connection somewhere in the circuit (which appears to be the problem) would have 'blown' in the manner that it apparently did.
Any ideas?
Last night I plugged the vacuum cleaner into a double wall socket. A lamp was plugged into the other half. As soon as I switched the vacuum cleaner on, the lamp went out (the vacuum cleaner wouldn't work either). Probably a fuse I thought. However all the other sockets and lights were fine. I used my socket tester which showed that there was a neutral fault. My power detector seemed to back this up and registered a current when I ran it up the wall. Given that all the other sockets and lights were fine, I assumed that the problem must be with the socket itself. However, upon checking the socket, all connections were correct and having used all my other gadgets, I'm satisfied that the socket's fine.
This particular socket did give me some trouble a couple of years ago. Sometimes it would work and sometimes it wouldn't. However, the problem seemed to sort itself out and since then, until now at least, I've not had a problem.
Now I'm not an electrician by trade (obviously) but would like to consider myself a relatively capable DIY enthusiast. Even so, this has me stumped. It was clearly the sudden demand which caused the circuit to 'blow'. However, shouldn't it have been the fuse that went? As I say, I'm not an expert but I wouldn't have thought that a neutral connection somewhere in the circuit (which appears to be the problem) would have 'blown' in the manner that it apparently did.
Any ideas?