Electrical Light Issue
Author
Discussion

GreigM

Original Poster:

6,740 posts

273 months

Thursday 17th February 2011
quotequote all
Can any sparks (professional or enthusiastic amateur) help me with a lighting wiring fault.

I have a set of outside lights which are controlled by an electronic timer switch inside. The wiring for this is very simple - just a single pair of live/load wires - as basic as a switch gets. This has worked without issue for years.

A few days ago the circuit breaker for these lights tripped on the consumer unit, and the fuse in the electronic timer switch had blown. So stuck in a new fuse and reset the breaker, and the lights were stuck permanently on - none of the timer controls (or its switch) had any impact and the only way to kill the lights is to remove the fuse again.

So I thought it must be a fault with the electronic timer switch, so replaced it, but exactly the same effect with a new unit (different brand/model).

In the meantime I've wired in a good old fashioned manual switch, but would like the electronic one to work.

So whats the likely cause - I'm thinking it'll possibly be a short in one of the light fittings outside, and the only way to tell is to change/remove them one by one....is this the correct way to go about it?

driverrob

4,837 posts

227 months

Thursday 17th February 2011
quotequote all
By circuit breaker do you mean ELCB, RCD or old fashioned over-current breaker?

GreigM

Original Poster:

6,740 posts

273 months

Thursday 17th February 2011
quotequote all
Sorry, I call it a breaker - just the switch on the consumer unit for that circuit (RCD?)

netherfield

3,082 posts

208 months

Thursday 17th February 2011
quotequote all
I'd say the timer is cooked.

Dogwatch

6,369 posts

246 months

Thursday 17th February 2011
quotequote all
Has a short developed which is jamming the electronics of the timer(s)? If fuses are blowing and circuit-breakers tripping then leccy must be going where it shouldn't.

dave_s13

13,991 posts

293 months

Friday 18th February 2011
quotequote all
Some of thes timers work thusly:-

- Switch supply off/on quickly = Light stays on permanently
- Switch supply off/on with 3-5 sec between off then back on again = timer function restores.

Imagine you are working outside on something for a long time, this gives you the option to have the light on all the time rather than going on/off every 30secs.

So.....Try turning off the supply to the timer/light - wait 5 sec - turn back on.....see if that sorts it.


Did you RTFM??

GreigM

Original Poster:

6,740 posts

273 months

Friday 18th February 2011
quotequote all
I did RTFM, but it was more of a note than manual, and it was FU.

However....I have got it working....checked the outside lights, one had a crack in the glass and was sitting in a puddle inside it - so removed it from the loop and the new timer switch is working perfectly....old one is still gubbed, but that not a problem.....