by singer »
Sat Feb 07, 2009 12:06 am
Hi roberto
I'm confused as well.
[quote]the cooker switch was off when i took the switch out...it went bang.[/quote]
Which switch do you mean was off? Do you mean the cooker switch itself or the main switch at the fuseboard(I'm assuming its not a circuit breaker as you go on to say its protected by a 30amp fuse)
Simply turning the cooker switch off doesn't mean its not alive when you remove it from the wall.
You still haven't said whether the bang caused the fuse to blow or not.
What kind of fuse is it? Is it the type that uses fuse wire? This is what I was refering to in my previous reply that you didnt understand.
When cartridge fuses blow due to a fault you simply remove the blown fuse and replace it with same so a 5amp fuse would be replaced with a 5amp fuse a 15 with a 15 and so on. Colour coding of fuses helps with identification so this replacement is usually straight forward.
However with rewireable fuses, when one blows the fusewire has to be replaced with the correct size wire depending on the size of the fuse.
So if your cooker is protected by a rewireable fuse which has blown before for some reason, it may say 30amp on the fuse carrier, but the wire that has been replaced in the fuse may be too big and capable of carrying much more than 30amps before blowing.
Did you remove the fuse from the fusebox before attempting to remove cooker switch from wall?
If as you say you've tested the cooker switch with a tester and the 30amp fuse makes it dead when removed then I fail to understand why it went bang.
[quote]the socket below the cooker switch was only wired into the cooker switch, spurred off with 2.5mm cable...is that allowed?[/quote]
This would be OK as long as the 2.5mm cable was not able to be overloaded, and this would be limited by the protection in the fuseboard.
A 30amp fuse wouldn't do this and would need to be reduced to a 20amp.
.