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Failure on IR

Evening All,


I’ve been running over some pre-existing circuits, unfortunately for a mate so I’m not even getting paid!!, and all circuits have passed accept one that I just cannot figure out.

It’s a standard 2.5 ring circuit for the lower sockets (only feeding a lounge area), supply comes out the CU, up through the first floor rafters, and drop to the first and last sockets. All other joining wires between sockets run under the floor boards (House has concrete floor in kitchen and hall, but wooden floor in the lounge).

Running IR tests, no issues at 250v, but then at 500v it ramps from 280 m ohms till it reaches 500, then at 1000 same scenario, starts at 280 m ohms and ramps up but never really makes it to the full 1000 m ohms. It seems worse on the L-E, but does also fail on Lives.

I’ve tried to fault find this by removing the sockets, testing individual cables (which all seem to pass), and then shortening the ring one socket at a time by use of a plug in link and disconnecting the sockets beyond the link. The conclusion I believe I have come to is that the two feed lines from the CU (by linking the first and last socket and removing the rest of the circuit out of the ring) are passing IR without any ramp up. The minute I start adding in the rest of the circuit, it begins to fail, so I’m sure there are issues with all the circuit under the lounge floor.


I am assuming it’s all 2.5 T+E under there, there is a spur which doesn’t seem to link to a socket (feed a light switch to an outside light), so hazard a guess is linked to a junction box under the floor.

With it being a ramp up on IR values, could this be a moisture issue? Maybe a cable is laying on the floor under the house and drawing moisture?

Or could it being a rodent issue maybe?


Any experience on this one and advice would be appreciated


Thanks

Rusty


Parents
  • Alasdair Anderson:

    Sounds to me as if there could be capacitance in the circuit. The reading rises as the capacitance charges up until it reaches a stable reading when the capacitance is fully charged. This is most often seen on very long cable runs due to the cable capacitance.

    If you have a long circuit that is ramping up during the test and you then split the circuit into two or more sections to retest individually they may not ramp up, because you no longer have a long circuit!


    Put the tester away and do some reading up on the subject and watch a few videos online, but be selective about whose videos you watch on YouTube.


    Ideally you need to actually get some tutoring getting hands on experience.
Reply
  • Alasdair Anderson:

    Sounds to me as if there could be capacitance in the circuit. The reading rises as the capacitance charges up until it reaches a stable reading when the capacitance is fully charged. This is most often seen on very long cable runs due to the cable capacitance.

    If you have a long circuit that is ramping up during the test and you then split the circuit into two or more sections to retest individually they may not ramp up, because you no longer have a long circuit!


    Put the tester away and do some reading up on the subject and watch a few videos online, but be selective about whose videos you watch on YouTube.


    Ideally you need to actually get some tutoring getting hands on experience.
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