Hi all
Had a failure of my live wire detector which resulted in a drill bit through my 32A ringmain cable in a wall which feeds sockets.
DOH.
Now in an ideal world I would just stick a junction box at the problem point and fix it, but there's 1.5cm of depth to fix this (cable is under plaster on a brick wall - good old Victorian houses) - and it's in the middle of a living room wall so a big sticky out junction box is a no no.
I cleaned up and checked the cables, then crimped them together to fix them - not a problem done and dusted (I actually crimped and soldered the crimp too, just for good measure).
However, I want advice on how to insulate things before any wiring is put back.
This second I have put heat shrink around fix points in the wire + 3 layers of insulation tape on top of the heat shrink - this is per wire. The thickness of the insulation tape alone helps separate the wires too. Then around all of this, 2 layers of heat shrink over everything. Then a metal shield over the top of the finished cable.
Everything works, checks out as electrically fine.
However is this enough for me - insulating tape isn't necessarily the best thing in the world in my brain. Friend recommended taking some spare 32A ringmain cable - taking off the gray outer plastic shielding and sticking this around individual heatshrunk wires to give a `more solid` insulation. Also want to make sure when plastering over everything there wouldn't be problems (moisture when drying). I could of course be going for complete overkill.
Unfortunately replacing the whole wire from socket just above the break to the next point of access would involve removing 1/2 a wall of plaster and going all the way back to the consumer unit. Not an option I want to go with.
Any ideas/comments?
Thanks!