This discussion is locked.
You cannot post a reply to this discussion. If you have a question start a new discussion

Tracing an underground cable fault?

Has anyone any experience of tracing an underground cable fault?

The cable supplies a private estates street lighting.

It's a 3 core 4mm SWA, approx. 50 metres in length, it has a Line to Earth fault.

I haven't separated the armour and internal earth core, so it could be a armour to Line cable fault, or a CPC to LIne fault. Either way the cable needs to be repaired.

We do not have drawings of where it runs, and from a site survey, it isnt obvious how it has been run either, logic would suggest it runs under the pavement, but a test digging yesterday at the first lamppost suggests it runs a direct route to its source across a garden.

I tested at both ends yesterday, it gave a wandering ~1600 ohms L-E reading, I was hoping the reading would be steady, then I could estimate where the fault was with the differing resisitance values from each end, but the reading was not steady at all - water ingress?

I did zap it a few times at 1000V insulation test, this made no difference, and, of course, gave a 0.00 Mohm reading.


Are there Companies with the equipment that is capable of tracing these faults?

We really don't want to dig up 50 metres of tarmaced pavement.
Parents

  • Alan Capon:
    AncientMariner:

    . . . Can you see any signs of severe gardening having taken place, not only along the "obvious" route, but also in the vicinity or close by elsewhere?



    New fence posts are always a possibility. It is surprising the damage you can do with a Metpost! 

    Regards,

    Alan. 


    Or a water meter!


    Our next door neighbours new water meter was grand for a few months and then Christmas Eve or the day before(?) The nick in the PILC street cable must have let some water in and it went dark!  For some months actually, since it was a 5-core main cable which included the street light's live supply.  Since SP don't replace like for like corewise, a new feed had to be supplied to the street light opposite.

    Clive
Reply

  • Alan Capon:
    AncientMariner:

    . . . Can you see any signs of severe gardening having taken place, not only along the "obvious" route, but also in the vicinity or close by elsewhere?



    New fence posts are always a possibility. It is surprising the damage you can do with a Metpost! 

    Regards,

    Alan. 


    Or a water meter!


    Our next door neighbours new water meter was grand for a few months and then Christmas Eve or the day before(?) The nick in the PILC street cable must have let some water in and it went dark!  For some months actually, since it was a 5-core main cable which included the street light's live supply.  Since SP don't replace like for like corewise, a new feed had to be supplied to the street light opposite.

    Clive
Children
No Data