Wired new socket, keeps cutting out

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Hi to all,

Im quite the beginner in household electrics, but I recently chopped into one of my cables and chock blocked a new electric cable off it to install a new socket, therefore providing two outputs from the block. I measured the voltage at the newly installed socket and this indicated 240v so I assumed the job was done. After plugging in a projector, I noticed it kept cutting out. I plugged in a surge protection extension and plugged a lamp in which operated correctly. I then plugged in a microwave in, which sent the surge protector mad. Whenever a large voltage is drawn it seems to spike then cut out.

Any ideas would be greatly appreciated
 
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Whenever a large voltage is drawn it seems to spike then cut out

The first and obvious idea is that the joint you made is unable to carry the current for anything larger ( in wattage ) than a lamp.

This suggests the joint you made is resistive. This means it will get hot when you draw current through it.

Loose screws, wrong size terminal block, damaged strands in the cable. Many causes of resistive joints.

It could get hot enough to cause a fire.
 
We will hope that the
chock blocked
connection is in a proper enclosure, and is availabnle to access in the event of a fault.?

Is that what you did? Good.
It should be easy to find where you have caused the problem then..
 
Oh I figured just using a standard terminal block would suffice. I think I'll look into that first. I wrapped the joint in plenty of electrical tape without an enclosure box, I take it this is very bad practice? I'll be honest, I just seen an electrical cable under the floorboards in a convenient position, cut it and created the two outputs without any regards whether or not it is a lighting circuit :/. Oh well, we learn through trial and error I suppose
 
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And the cable must be clipped, if you use one of those boxes,, otherwise there's nothing to stop the wires being yanked out.

And you can't just hide the box away.

But first of all you MUST identify what that cable is that you spliced into. Suppose its the wire to your room thermostat??, maybe that's why its going crazy…. :eek:
 
So I changed the choc block for a round junction block as posted in the link previous, this has still not worked. (what a nightmare they are to fit btw). So it seems the cable I cut into was a lighting circuit for downstairs. Would this affect the performance of my newly installed plug Socket?
 
Yes it would.

It would mean either

A) you can't draw high loads off it.

Or

B) if a cable going to a switch, not work at all.
 
So I changed the choc block for a round junction block as posted in the link previous, this has still not worked. (what a nightmare they are to fit btw). So it seems the cable I cut into was a lighting circuit for downstairs. Would this affect the performance of my newly installed plug Socket?

You aren't supposed to hide any sort of screwed connection away, under the floor (I guess that's what you've done?). It has to be accessible.

But that's not the real problem. You obviously have no idea what the cable is you've spliced into. It could (for instance) be the wire to a light switch. Even if it were the lighting feed cable, it would not have enough power available to power a socket.
So stop doing what you are doing, and get an electrician in to sort out your mess, before you do you, or your loved ones, some damage.
 

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