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Electric Shock from Old P.I.R. Floodlight.

Today I was asked to investigate why an old outside P.I.R. tungsten halogen floodlight did not work. It had been installed on a 70s holiday chalet. The owner had installed it himself and admitted that he did not know much about electrics. I used my aluminium ladder to access it, the ladder has plastic feet and it stood on a concrete surface. When I went up to the floodlight my Voltstick suggested that the supply cable was dead. But when I touched the fitting I got a shock, this before I had removed the terminal box  cover. Anyway, after turning off at the consumer unit I noticed that the owner had fitted the live supply wire into the earth terminal. That was the cause of the shock I imagined. Anyway I removed the old floodlight and was going to fit a new L.E.D. one. I tested at the supply cable but there was no supply. All M.C.B.s were on and the R.C.D. was on as well. So how did I get a shock if the supply cable was dead? A charged capacitor perhaps? Or induced Voltage? No switch was found that controlled this cable.


I got a reading of about 2 Volts from the main P.M.E. earth terminal and a temporary earth rod bashed into the lawn.


There are three 11kV overheads about 30 metres away from this chalet.


Any ideas please?


Z.
Parents
  • Was it only dead after you touched it and something has since tripped/blown. Or, is your ladder live in that position?. A live wall is not totally impossible if there has been a cable nailing accident , and the wall is damp. Clearly in some odd way this cable is not completely continuous. I'd half expect supply  to come off the back of the nearest light switch, and only to work when the hall light is also on (or only if it is off if they use the back contact of a 2 way switch.)
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  • Was it only dead after you touched it and something has since tripped/blown. Or, is your ladder live in that position?. A live wall is not totally impossible if there has been a cable nailing accident , and the wall is damp. Clearly in some odd way this cable is not completely continuous. I'd half expect supply  to come off the back of the nearest light switch, and only to work when the hall light is also on (or only if it is off if they use the back contact of a 2 way switch.)
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