Hi Guys,
First-time poster. And almost never made it this far as had a scary incident this evening that I'd like some advice on please as I am a little out of depth.
So I have this nice dimmable halogen floor lamp that stopped working a while back and I thought I'd have a go at fixing it. The first thing I did was change a bulb for a new one. Still dead.
Then I changed the fuse in the plug. I saw it had a 3 Amp but as I only had a spare 13 Amp I used that. Nothing happened.
Then I thought the dimmer module might be faulty, so I opened it up to have a look, was amazed how complex it was inside, then decided to connect the light direct to a plug to take said dimmer out the equation. Put a new plug on (13 Amp) and switched on the plug. Big flash and bang, but no electrical shock to me I'm relieved to say. wasn't expecting that. (I triple checked that I had blue to neutral and brown to live, there was no earth).
I'm left wondering what could have happened and what I could do next?
Was it because I used a 13A fuse instead of the 3A that caused this? But if this happened to a 13A I can only imagine what it would have done to a 3A.
Was the dimmer module doing something critical such that it can't be bypassed (hence its sophistication - see pics below). Is it just not meany to go direct.
Why didn't the main fuse board flip?
Have I killed the light completely?
Could it be the case that a blown bulb is the root cause? They're really tricky to take out and I've already destroyed one of the delicate globe light covers.
Thanks for any advice.