8 years later, still helping people pass there 2391 inspection and testing exams! I just passed today. Can't thank you enough for the simple and easy way of explaining.
@babangidaciroma44912 жыл бұрын
By far one of the greatest teacher on KZbin. Awesome..... Keep the good work John and you shall be remembered for your good work even after you're gone
@james55535 жыл бұрын
Great teaching. I often use a similar method; however, you have to be 100% on top of your subject, which you certainly are! Great work from a seasoned teacher.
@Simon_Portillo8 жыл бұрын
Another excellent explanation. You are a very clear communicator John! That video has summed up why radials are the way forward :-)
@MrSteveykk6 жыл бұрын
I'm doing a work from home course for electrical installations and the book's jargon and lack of diagrams have made things extremely hard to learn. Thanks to this video everything has come into focus. Thanks so much!
@harrycallaghan25312 жыл бұрын
Love John's explanations. Somewhat therapeutic and educative at the same time. Cheers John.
@train49054 жыл бұрын
An absolutely superb video john.very methodical,very clear, and very well presented. Well done sir.keep up the great videos.thankyou loads Steve.
@ursamajor65465 жыл бұрын
Crystal clear as usual. If all my teachers were like JW when I was at school, I'd have left with 10 A Levels (That's 10 x A levels - not 10 amp levels 😅) MANY thanks 👍
@emanueleleschiera51713 жыл бұрын
Really thanks for the best explaination ever! You get directely at the point without miss nothing on a practice way, weel done!
@tonyp28786 жыл бұрын
Thank you John I understand your explanation more easy than in college. Cheers !
@bdawinton7 жыл бұрын
I work in Bermud that follows the US codes these videos are facination to see the differences.
@RicktheRecorder17 күн бұрын
Best and simplest explanations on the internet.
@fattoamanowoodwork3638 Жыл бұрын
Brilliant as always. Love your explanations, clear, comprehensive and always on point. Thank you.
@gecc31833 ай бұрын
I forgot what it was and heard someone talking about it and then I came back once again here. Time flys.
@uliman1007 жыл бұрын
Thank you John for your great tutorial video's... Although here in South Africa it is not common to find ring circuits, they do exist as a lot of electricians from the UK over the years installed them at some point... I have come across it in a house that I owned a couple of years ago... needless to say I changed it to a radial circuit as it did not make any sense to me at the time... only to learn after why it was done that way...I agree with you that it should not be common practice to do it in the first place...
@sbusweb4 жыл бұрын
+John Ward Given the fun wih USB-sockest providing a loading between L-N ... I wonder if these mess up L-N crossed resistance tests?. If so, what about doing the tests as CPC-Neutral crossed, and then, separately CPC-Line crossed -- would this still provide all the appropriate test coverage so far as continuity and polarity and resistive-joints are concerned, but avoid complications of L-N loads applied? [I appreciate a full voltage L-N IR test still ould'nt be possible].
@000hugohew6 жыл бұрын
Hi John i will going to take my test soon would you able to guide " What is the design consideration in sizing a final circuit in an electrical installation? " what does it mean "in sizing" MCB rate, Cable size or DB size......?
@trueriver19505 жыл бұрын
At 23:00 surely as you go round testing, if you found inf on test 2, you would fix that before proceeding? I can't imagine starting a second test knowing I already had a problem. That means you are checking for L reversed with either N or E, or L or N not connected, or switch off. Probably I'd check the switch first as it's an easy check and easy to rectify
@DrGreenGiant6 жыл бұрын
Could you please cover what you do if you have one of these double gang with USB. Seems to skew readings somewhat
@jwflame6 жыл бұрын
Test without them connected. Otherwise any test results are meaningless.
@aidencaldwell19995 жыл бұрын
Simon Howroyd transformers for the usb skew the readings disconnect the socket front and connect into terminal blocks for testing
@gedman95276 жыл бұрын
great video, informative explained well , when you going to bang a tune out on that organ in the background in your videos
@gerardmelvin86708 жыл бұрын
Great videos John great for training my grandson and foster kids.
@消失風雨中-h3o6 жыл бұрын
Best video for beginner to understand this test
@fredbloggs48294 жыл бұрын
Hi John. Not sure I agree with your comment about the "undesirable" additional path making a sort of figure of 8 in the centre leading to overload conditions. If the original outer ring is rated correctly, then adding any additional connections between two sockets cam only make it better (ie more current sharing) not worse.
@bramcoteelectrical10883 жыл бұрын
that's all fine until "that figure of 8 part gets messed around with or added onto by Mr diy....then you technically have a hybrid radial on a ring or AKA a spur with more than one double socket on it 🤔 🤣 and then you will get a possible overload on this back to the point its in the rest of the ring... so main issue is unskilled diy persons adding or disconnection the middle part of the figure of 8 thinking its technically a "ring" opps!! overload time +🔥
@awinbisa6 ай бұрын
Thanks for your amazing videos. Did you ever consider reading the shipping forecast? I love your style.
@garethmairs48972 жыл бұрын
Question... Can you do these tests at a socket if the consumer unit is a total mess and is difficult to get in at
@highgatehandyman64793 жыл бұрын
Best technical presentation on Utube
@John-gv1fl4 жыл бұрын
Extremely helpful information, thanks
@Graham_Langley8 жыл бұрын
Something I've come across twice now is cross-coupled rings. On an existing installation it should be very obvious - the ring is still live when disconnected - but on a new one pre-connection would any of these tests find it? Edit: Now that I'm thinking more clearly the answer's yes in all the cases I can think of.
@ranat55264 жыл бұрын
Hello John, I am planning on a new build and wondered if I could implement radials within the house/rooms rather than having a ring system on the sockets within the 2 floor house.
@jwflame4 жыл бұрын
Yes, you can have any arrangement of circuits. One per floor, one for each room, or whatever you want.
@anthonygrosvenor72463 жыл бұрын
How do I do a 20 min presentation on inspection and testing it's a 5-7 day course
@jayk2k3 жыл бұрын
There are two separate ring circuits , one for the lights and one for the plug sockets , yea ? How would I find the problem that is making the fuse trip when using the light switch ?
@stupidlogic29872 жыл бұрын
No, lighting should be on a Radial circuit, not a ring. Any tripping would be an issue with either the light fitting or switch (whether it's wiring or the actual accessory). There is a specific video for lighting wiring, if you have not already found it.
@jayk2k2 жыл бұрын
@@stupidlogic2987 got a link for it ?
@bilalislam72197 жыл бұрын
When approximating the values for the L-E, instead of adding them together and dividing them by 4 can we not implement the formula for resistance for parallel paths as they are in parallel, so (1/r1 +1/r2) which gives us an approximation ~0.281 ohmes? Thanks
@paulgrimshaw63016 жыл бұрын
The parallel formula gives the minimum value possible(socket at the CU), whereas (a+b)/4 gives the maximum (socket half way around). However it's a weighted avg, and sockets around 70% of the ring will be closer to the maximum.
@moortown116 жыл бұрын
JW.. How did you do on the 18th update test?
@alanwilliams48352 жыл бұрын
Absolutely brilliant this man explains everything so well
@trueriver19505 жыл бұрын
Question: you are clear that you don't like ring circuits. So on a radial, how do you test each socket for the problems which are identified by these ring circuit tests?? It's always seemed to me that these tests are an advantage to ring circuits, rather than a problem. If I'm missing something here, please enlighten me
@Dime_Bar8 жыл бұрын
Very helpful and informative thanks. But I am wondering if them plug socket testers that light up green or red to indicate a fault can do away with stage 2 & 3 tests if you have good values from test 1?
@jwflame8 жыл бұрын
No, those plug in things are next to useless as they only indicate a small number of faults in certain circumstances. They can only be used on a powered circuit, and most testing should be done before power is applied.
@hkhabbazeh2 жыл бұрын
Hi John, thank you for these valuable videos. I have built a ring circuit but i am measuring a live on the earth somehow !!! any idea why?
@sundownsolutions23 жыл бұрын
Hi John, where do all these readings get recorded on the results sheet? Cheers
@michaelcostello69913 жыл бұрын
From test 1 for CPC continuity can we assume the earth cannot incorrectly wired ?
@kevinallen91065 жыл бұрын
At 12:17, you say "single socket". I thought one instance of a double socket was allowed on a spur (26A being within the current capacity of a radial 2.5mm^2 T&E, C-method)? Don't have my regs to hand whilst watching this...
@jwflame5 жыл бұрын
One double is permitted. Most doubles are not rated to 26A anyway.
@sukhi172 жыл бұрын
Brilliant video!
@alexeinnem59518 жыл бұрын
Good day John Ward, Should any regard be given, when testing socket outlet circuits, to the indicator light that on the socket? Is there a chance, that the insulation test between conductors, may damage the light? Your videos are very well presented, very informative and a pleasure to watch, thank you.
@darrenbanton89292 жыл бұрын
Thank you John. I’ve learned a lot already. Much appreciated
@CarlosArruda778 жыл бұрын
Spurs or not on the test results we put down the highest readings correct? Either being obtained on a socket within the ring or on a spur or fused spur?
@buttmunchlove7 жыл бұрын
great video. on the final test for polarity it would be good to mention the reading from each socket would be from outside not from the reverse terminals.
@68LeCoq8 жыл бұрын
Hi question : how to identify opposite legs on a existing circuit for a continuity test. Thanks
@fasalmahmood715 жыл бұрын
Hi, is it normal to get no resistance at the CCU while doing stage 2 of the ring final test? While doing stage one I did get resistance from all conductors, but at the CCU during stage 2 there was 0 resistance and at the socket outlets I had a reading of 0.35 ohms.
@jwflame5 жыл бұрын
There must be some resistance, so the reading of 0 is wrong. Check that the leads are properly connected, the battery in the meter, and if it has a zero leads function that it has been used correctly and for the actual leads that are in use.
@trueriver19505 жыл бұрын
I think you left the two ends of the earth connected to each other as well as connected to the other cable, or ditto with the live. Or some such mistake. Easy to make in practice
@lukegriffin57978 жыл бұрын
Hi John, thanks for your videos they're most helpful but I've got a question I can't seem to find an answer to anywhere online, or even get a solid answer from other qualified sparkys with more experience.. basically, what's your take on "tree rings"? For example an old 6mm radial used for a cooker originally is now terminated into a JB or connector and then a 2.5mm ring final has been connected, both lines and neutrals respectively to the 6mm. Is this allowed so long as the connection is maintenance free? And how would you test this, and also what would you write in the test results, 2.5mm or 6mm? Of course I know it's bad practice to do this and would never do something like this when installing but for ease of getting back to the consumer unit, which isn't an option as the house has been redecorated and cables chopped into walls....therefore I'm being told to do this 6mm to 2 x 2.5mm but I'm not sure. Thanks for your time and keep up the good work!!!
@jwflame8 жыл бұрын
Although not one of the 'standard circuits' it is permitted and nothing wrong with it. The connection does not have to be maintenance free if it is accessible, and for testing purposes it would be better if the 6mm to 2.5mm joint was accessible so it could be recorded as a 6mm circuit supplying a 2.5mm ring, each part tested and recorded separately.
@Webbster777 жыл бұрын
John Ward hi John, I've asked you about this before but I'm still not straight with it in my own head... figure of 8 test - my bosses don't do it and say they don't need to as they calculate the r1/r2, which is fine but it doesn't show any cross connections on the ring. Would a Zs test pick it up? I would say no and that it is really important to do figure of 8 to prove the ring is in good shape. I'm finding it difficult to come up with a decent argument as to why we should be doing it - can you help me!
@davidprivate57867 жыл бұрын
That's an interesting way of supplying a ring for sure.
@simonwilliams46216 жыл бұрын
Used to see this kind of circuit a lot in schools etc for IT rooms and the like, usually 6mm wired to a 45 A switch on the wall which then converted to 2.5mm ring around the room. To test split the ring at a socket outlet (after safe isolation procedure of course) test and record ring continuity of conductor ends then connect for "figure 8" ring final test and be sure to include the DB connection as well as each outlet thus including the 6mm cable as if it was a conventional spur from the ring. The value at the DB will be higher than the expected ring values due to the resistance added by the 6mm cable. The highest value is recorded as R1+R2. Alternatively test ring final and R1+R2 of 6mm independently and add values together. If recording circuit in one line on test schedule then 2.5mm is the smallest conductor present in the circuit so I would record this (although if cert is handwritten you could always fit both sizes in the box). A frequent problem with this circuit was that someone would switch the switch on and have several computers start at once and the inrush current (particularly back in the days of CRT monitors) would operate a type B MCB/RCBO (poor circuit design).
@bramcoteelectrical10883 жыл бұрын
@@Webbster77 why would you calculate r1+r2?? measured is the only sade and true method..Zs proves nothing ... as an example I trsted very old flats double sockets knowing they were 1950 wiring with no cpc only the metal conduit with singles inside but the conduit want connected at the consumer unit. doing a Zs test at each outlet... got good readings... so the Measured Zs is NOT a good guide to ensure a continuous earth path for fault current in absence of a cpc. r1+r2 measured is mentioned in GN3
@syproful8 жыл бұрын
So, if one phase wire is disconnected all loads lands on the other half of the ring wich will mean a potential overload situation. If this was done in the old days to save on the copper, ok. But is this still being done to this day ? It just isn't worth it in my opinion.
@jwflame8 жыл бұрын
Rings can still be installed and some people continue to do so. However in most normal circumstances there are few if any advantages to them. The copper saving thing isn't valid now either, as that was comparing the 'new' ring system introduced in the late 1940s to the earlier wiring where every outlet had it's own individual cable back to the fusebox. However it's not clear whether any copper would have been saved even there, since lower rated outlets such as 2 amp and 5 amp would have been installed with much smaller wire sizes anyway.
@Mark1024MAK6 жыл бұрын
Brian B - Ring vs. Radial Which you should specify depends on many factors. What are the expected loads (does the building have central heating, so will plug in electric heaters be used or not, what appliances are expected to be used, etc. etc.). How many socket outlets do you want, both NOW and in the future (when someone decides to rearrange the furniture in the rooms). Now draw up a plan on paper to work out the details. I always recommend that you specify more socket outlets than your immediate current requirements, as providing them now is far easier than making alterations later. In a rooms where there are plenty of socket outlets, the distance between the sockets will not be that far, so the difference in cable cost between two radials and a single ring circuit will be insignificant if buying drums of cable. Properly designed and installed ring circuits are just as safe as radial circuits. Ring circuits are more flexible for the end user, as they can plug any normal appliance in to any socket outlet they like. Whereas if 20A radial circuits are used, too many high powered appliances connected and switched on at the same time on one circuit will trip the MCB. Worse if the protective device is a fuse... Fuses have the disadvantage that people can put in higher rated fuses, higher rated fuse-wire, or normal wire or other conductive material. And don’t think that a MCB protected consumer unit can save the day, as I have come across radial circuits run in 2.5mm squared cable protected by 32A MCBs... Properly designed and installed radial circuit circuits have the advantage that no fixed wiring cables should overheat. But a poor conductor connection in a socket outlet could cause overheating and may result in a fire. So the argument that a fault will always show up in a radial circuit does not wash with me. With a ring circuit, a disconnection or a poor connection could result in a cable being overloaded if multiple high power appliances are in use. But as there are two current paths, it does depend on where the fault is in relation to the circuit wiring.
@heronimousbrapson8635 жыл бұрын
This why no other wiring scheme outside that found in the UK system uses ring circuits.
@Mark1024MAK5 жыл бұрын
Tubmaster 5000 - as I said above, there are just as many potential faults in a radial circuit as a ring circuit. And there are some advantages to the ring circuit, as I outlined above. Which aspect are you referring to?
@papillonbougie70802 жыл бұрын
please could you make a video on 3 phase Motor testing. thanks
@alanmarriott92163 жыл бұрын
My expected r1/r2 should have been 0.92 but measured 1.20. Do you class that as high and what fault as majority of sockets all measured that!? Many thanks John 👍
@jahanmoh Жыл бұрын
Thank you
@JimWhitaker4 жыл бұрын
As always, very clear.
@muratbaykal65503 жыл бұрын
Sir, sorry I am not a native English speaker, the afarementioned circuit is a ring circuit I guess, I am used to see radial circuits, thank you for the explanation.
@mattkeen38118 жыл бұрын
4mm Radials are a nice idea in theory, but in practice they're a pain in the arse.
@MrBradleya164 жыл бұрын
they get us to do them sometimes in offices, trying to squeeze 2 4mms into a socket termination haha nightmare
@JohnSmith-ws7fq3 жыл бұрын
Do you really need 32A most of the time though? Except for a kitchen, 20A radials would often be sufficient.
@bramcoteelectrical10883 жыл бұрын
I use 4mm all the time in rewires now
@TomaszDrummerKreczko6 жыл бұрын
can I use the 2.5 mm ring sockets for 2 sockets in a 1.5 mm wire? just because 2 low-power speakers will be used? Can I do that?
@jwflame6 жыл бұрын
If it's a 32A ring, then it must be 2.5mm, for 1.5mm wire it would need to be a 16A or lower circuit breaker.
@normanhartill14245 жыл бұрын
Do usb outlets affect readings?
@gifthurstchoto95705 жыл бұрын
would also love to know..
@ScottMcD915 жыл бұрын
Yes they do, must be disconnected before IR test.
@trueriver19505 жыл бұрын
@@ScottMcD91 And often in cafes, etc, they don't work and it turns out the electrician disconnected them for the rest and forgot (or was too lazy) to reconnect them. Worth money to anyone willing to fix the problem on a no fix no fee basis :)
@Jack-nl7hz5 жыл бұрын
Hi John, when you mention that the reading will drop at the middle socket if wired incorrectly it made me wounder how do you identify what side this will happen? Or why one side increased & the other decreased. I hope you can understand how I've asked my question. Thanks for the great tutorials 👍
@trueriver19505 жыл бұрын
When you context the tails wrongly for this test, the resistance drops as you go round the circuit starting in EITHER direction from the CU, it's highest at the CU and drops towards the middle. When it starts rising again you know you passed the middle. I hope I correctly understood your q, and that I explained the answer in enough detail.
@dilligaf23865 жыл бұрын
John can you do a video on how to wire in a 13amp rcd spur to protect 2 out side sockets. Cheers.
@jermainefalconer29672 жыл бұрын
Great teacher. Great artist 🤣👊
@mohamedhidaar30333 жыл бұрын
Hi John Thank you very much for your videos and the time you spent on them, and thank you for the excellent explanation in different sections. I just want a little more explanation about the values of the resistance of the Live, Neutral and Earth. Are these values of resistance always the same? How about if the conductors are longer or shorter. I have this question because you said the Spure will have some extra resistance due to the extra wire. So, the length plays a role. If the length has effect, how come you come to those values. On which length are based? Regards Mohamed
@jwflame3 жыл бұрын
The resistance depends on the length of the cables. Longer =- higher resistance, shorter = lower resistance. Each installation will be different.
@mohamedhidaar30333 жыл бұрын
@@jwflame Thank you very much!
@sankyeat Жыл бұрын
Why is it a 1/4 of r1 + rn ? I don't understand why it's relevant that we are measuring across two places
@jwflame Жыл бұрын
The two conductors are connected in a circle, and each measurement is across the diameter of that circle. Half of each conductor, and there are two halves in parallel, which is 1/4 of the total resistance.
@davidmarsden88684 жыл бұрын
If you suspect or find a ‘bridge’ do you continue with the test and note the bridge on the report or do you have to remove it?
@jwflame4 жыл бұрын
If it's for an EICR, then you just report on what's there - an EICR does not include repairs. For a new installation, any defects must be rectified before the certificate is issued.
@davidmarsden88684 жыл бұрын
@@jwflame thanks
@Jasonphillips648 жыл бұрын
Hi John your channel is very rewarding thank you, could i ask you a question please, i have been all over the internet to try to find out how to calculate volt drop in a ring cct, i have watched your vidios on max demand and vidios on voltage drop. when you calculate volt drop for a ring main is there a different proceedure because when i do the calculations for a 32a ring ground area 106m from osg 18mv/a/m 1.2 factor and devide by 1000 the answer exeeds 5% 11.5v could you explain how to calculate voly drop correctly in a ring main please when you get the time. thank you for a great channel you have helped so many including myself. thak you.
@jwflame8 жыл бұрын
It's not stated how it was calculated for the OSG, and there are several methods. However the worst case would be the full 32A load furthest from the origin, but the 18mV/A/m must be divided by 4 as there are 2 parallel cables and both will be half the total length of the ring. That still gives over 5% for total 106m length, however it does state 'distributed load' so they have presumably used some other method with various loads at points around the ring rather than all at a single location.
@bartman588 жыл бұрын
do you use a 4 mm radial for a kitchen/utility John?
@jwflame8 жыл бұрын
Depends on the size of the kitchen and what will be used in it.
@alq10828 жыл бұрын
I would stick to a ring in the kitchen due to the amount of electrical appliances in the modern kitchen. However i have installed 16A radials for the rest of my house house. 16A is plenty of power these days.
@lewisbrand6 жыл бұрын
I used a 4mm2 ring final cicuit for my kitchen on a 40 amp RCBO
@festokapinga3426 жыл бұрын
Yes you can use
@festokapinga3426 жыл бұрын
How many plates cooker you use?
@459HAMED6 жыл бұрын
Let's say if you was doing the end to end and had no continuity for cpc what would be the best action to undertake in finding the break in the ring?
@jwflame6 жыл бұрын
Connect L&E from one side at the consumer unit, test at each socket until there is no continuity between L&E. Repeat for the other cable. The break is somewhere between the two sockets.
@trueriver19505 жыл бұрын
@@jwflame Assuming I'm following round the circuit from the CU in the order the cables run, I'd start as you suggest. Before repeating for the other cable, I'd take a quick look at the socket where I hit the problem. If I get lucky that will be where the problem is and it will be something obvious like a cable fallen out -- But not if I cabled it of course ;) Then check the last socket that was successful for similar obvious faults. If that's still not the problem continue as JW suggests and it will be a broken conductor between sockets. Apparently mice can bite through copper, but not more than once per mouse when they go for L. Sometimes you actually find the dead mouse: use disposable gloves to handle due to disease risk
@danielteyehuago16333 жыл бұрын
Please how did you get those figures
@jwflame3 жыл бұрын
Those in the video are just examples. For a real installation, the resistance would be measured for each conductor using a suitable test device.
@sergioswedenborg87466 жыл бұрын
Hi John, let me ask you If connecting Line and Earth on Step 3, we double the length of the wire, why we should divide by 4? I mean, the resistance is directed proportional to the length of the cables, if we double the length we should double the resistance, isn't it?
@ef74802 жыл бұрын
You probably know the answer by now but there are 2 paths for current on each conductor hence the divide by 4
@duncanseath7456 жыл бұрын
Hi Jon, Finding your videos helpful as I am working toward taking 2391-52 exams this autumn. Your explanations are in layman's terms. Just wanted to ask.... In the ring final continuity testing video did you say that the socket outlets must be switched on to carry out the testing as I cannot see why that makes a difference when each conductor is loops in to back? Thanks Duncan
@jwflame6 жыл бұрын
The socket needs to be switched on when testing at the sockets. Makes no difference to the other tests.
@duncanseath7456 жыл бұрын
@@jwflame thank you for clearing that Jon, keep up the good work
@bramcoteelectrical10883 жыл бұрын
socket outlets get worn over time okie you might have solid connections in the back ...but the actual receptacle part that accepts the 13amp plug might have a high resistance 🤔 so good to check or just plug and unplug your tester lead in and out a few times tends to "cure" the oxidation
@bobuk57226 жыл бұрын
Hi folks. The 230 volt ring main loop impeadance explanation is a bit misleading to begin with. John expands on it a few minutes later with a much better explanation - the protective conductor in the UK has a higher loop resistance than either the line or neutral loops as it is a bit thinner. It needs to carry enough power to blow the plug fuse or trip the ring main mcb quickly, it is not having to power a suite of 13 amp appliances. BobUK.
@sabudjed11353 ай бұрын
Thanks for this great teaching
@brightspark545 жыл бұрын
whats with your earth bonding on the wall cabinet
@jwflame5 жыл бұрын
It's an earth strap connected to the bench mat, that can be clipped onto equipment on the bench, such as a computer that has plastic feet. Bench mat connected to earth elsewhere. Clipped onto the cabinet to keep it out of the way.
@allancachia83695 жыл бұрын
Hello. First of all nice and interesting clips. Keep it up. Have one question about checking if you have a break on wires ring circuit. Your checking the circuit by meter with resistance. Can you check the wires by continuity instead? Thank you
@jwflame5 жыл бұрын
Continuity can be used to confirm if there is a break or not. The other tests still need the actual resistance value.
@trueriver19505 жыл бұрын
A good Q. Continuity detects breaks, but not dodgy connections. You need to check both, as a dodgy connection can cause a fire. A meter checks both at once, so there is no point doing a separate contiuity check.
@tae60134 жыл бұрын
Hi John, Thanks for very informative video but wondering about reading value of 0.3ohm at 17:37... The reading value should be half of live+cpc resistance of 0.6ohm when reading at each sockets because we are measuring parallel resistance of live+cpc therefore it would be around 0.6ohm but actual value to be recorded of R1+R2 would be (0.45+0.75)/4=0.3ohm reason being both wires are ring. I still think the reading value at each socket would be 0.6ohm but real R1+R2 value would be 0.3ohm. Would appreciate if you can advice me on this please. Regards Alan J
@jwflame4 жыл бұрын
The wires are connected in a large circle, with resistance measured across the diameter of that circle, so between any two points you only have half of the wire length of the two conductors = half the resistance. Those are effectively in parallel, which halves it again, the end result being a quarter of the total loop resistance. Another way is to get 4x 1 ohm resistors and connect them in a loop - total loop resistance is 4 ohms, but measure across that loop and the resistance is 1 ohm, as each side is half of the total loop (2 ohms) and those in parallel is half again, which is 1 ohm.
@jwflame4 жыл бұрын
There will be a video on this soon.
@davidceredig-evans87723 жыл бұрын
Another brilliant video. Many thanks.
@chrissmith72594 жыл бұрын
Thanks, this has been really helpful.
@danielmeredith19138 жыл бұрын
John, is it possible to get a email address that I could contact u on? Many thanks
@edglue61383 жыл бұрын
it's in the description above
@paulmorrey4298Ай бұрын
Thanks John
@antthehuman8 жыл бұрын
Hi John, You said something like "to avoid the tests don't use ring circuits." What is the alternative? Every socket outlet wired directly back to the consumer unit with its own circuit breaker? If so that'd be a lot of wire and circuit breakers. (Thank you for the great videos.)
@jwflame8 жыл бұрын
Radial circuit with multiple sockets, starts at the consumer unit and ends at the last socket. Cable sized appropriately for the circuit breaker. 2.5mm² and 20A is one possibility.
@antthehuman8 жыл бұрын
So you can daisy-chain sockets along a radial circuit. Do you think you might do another video about the required testing for radial circuits?
@5roundsrapid2638 жыл бұрын
+John Ward that's exactly how it's done in the US. Usually a 120v 20 amp breaker and cable for each room's sockets and another for its lights. Higher current appliances have their own circuits. We even have some 230v circuits, but usually only for ovens, dryers, etc.
@g.williamswilliams84423 жыл бұрын
Very good video. A nice refresher 😄
@allthegearnoidea67525 жыл бұрын
Does anyone know why they call the earth wire r2 rather and earth etc ?
@trueriver19505 жыл бұрын
I don't know, but can guess. First I will confess that I used to think r1 (arr one) was rl (arr ell) having learnt initially from books rather than a live teacher ;) Second I will comes that I thought I'd this when I first saw Star Wars and artoo success his data probe into a power socket... OK so that makes me a total nerd Now my guess is that you calculate the current on short circuit to earth as V / (r1 + r2), and in that particular equation it looks mathematical to have a one and a two. If you don't have a RCB then how fast the breaker trips on that current is important for safety. Not so relevant now RCB protection is more available than it was in the forties. Just my guess. Someone please comment if you know better
@allthegearnoidea67525 жыл бұрын
True River some food for thought thanks for taking the time to answer Thanks regards Chris.
@grimninja20048 жыл бұрын
so technically in ring circuits you can run wire half the required gauge , since there is 2 wires one from each side that would share the load , would be like paralleling??
@UCCLdIk6R5ECGtaGm7oqO-TQ8 жыл бұрын
Near enough, yeah. It can save on a lot of copper if you have a return leg back from the last socket to the board (so, you can pull 32A easy using 2.5mm2 cable in a ring config, whereas you'd need 4mm2 for the same power on a radial circuit).
@trueriver19505 жыл бұрын
No. Paralleling only divides the current evenly if the legs are the same length. In an arbitrary ring it has to be nearly the full amount, as you don't know how the current will divide till the user plugs in whatever combination of appliances they go for. If I remember right, the original was a 30A fuse and imperial guage wrote that was rated as 28A (though it's a long time ago and I might be wrong). That was within rating if you took all the Max rated current from just 1/15th of the way round the cable. The metric version is less safe, and requires you to be 3/14 of the way round if you insist on drawing all the current at one place In practice, several things mitigate the likely problem. 1. A ring main is intended to be used where the appliances will be distributed around the circuit 2. It is rare for users to try to use the Max 3. It's not actually dangerous, as the ratings include safety factors. You are however eroding those safety factors, and JW would correctly argue that it's bad policy to condone that even if it's safe.
@trueriver19505 жыл бұрын
@@UCCLdIk6R5ECGtaGm7oqO-TQ I disagree: it can't be half the current. See my longer reply
@UCCLdIk6R5ECGtaGm7oqO-TQ5 жыл бұрын
@@trueriver1950 "Near enough". What, you're going to argue minor differences in resistance are going to significantly bias the current loading onto one leg or the other?
@JohnSmith-ws7fq3 жыл бұрын
@@UCCLdIk6R5ECGtaGm7oqO-TQ Could do and that's why BS7671 requires a minimum CCC of 20A for a ring final - 25% more than half the breaker's current rating.
@elektronikmaleinfach166 жыл бұрын
Is only metric cable diameters use in the uk???
@jwflame6 жыл бұрын
Yes, all metric since the early 1970s.
@elektronikmaleinfach166 жыл бұрын
Before 1970 these american wire crap or a different system?
@jwflame6 жыл бұрын
Older wires were sized by the number of strands and the diameter of each strand in inches. A size such as 7/.029 would have 7 strands of copper, each one 0.029 inches in diameter.
@trueriver19505 жыл бұрын
@@jwflame Yes they made it illegal to sell imperial after a certain date, and if I remember right they made it illegal for old imperial stock even to be used on new wiring after about five more years, to give sparks a fair chance to use up old stock. Of course you will still find old cabling. If the existing fixed wiring is coloured black/red instead of brown/blue it's certainly imperial guage. The modern colour cables could be either as the color change happened before the metric standards were enforced, again if I remember right. Please someone tell me if I'm wrong
@timfairfield56358 жыл бұрын
i read they don t use ring circuits anymore? on new installations
@TheChipmunk20088 жыл бұрын
We're still installing them on new builds (Although the guy I work with, like John, prefers radials, you do what the customer asks for lol)
@Mark1024MAK6 жыл бұрын
New ring circuits are still installed, both in domestic buildings, offices and for light industrial use.
@kamuts76 жыл бұрын
Im confused, OG says the maximum resistance value of a ring is 0.05 ohms how come if the reading is 0.86 is accepted? (Ive seen on youtube by a qualified electrician) Thanks
@jwflame6 жыл бұрын
It isn't 0.05.
@kamuts76 жыл бұрын
Sorry John what is the max value of resistance allowed then ? Thanks
@jwflame6 жыл бұрын
The maximum value is derived from the maximum impedance for the circuit, which for a 32A Type B circuit breaker is 1.15 ohms. That is the total of the circuit resistance plus the external loop impedance, so with an external impedance of 0.35 (typical for a TN-C-S supply), the maximum circuit resistance would be 0.8 ohms. If the external impedance is less, the circuit resistance can be higher. The 0.05 is referring to when measuring the resistance of the individual conductors, they should all be identical, or at most be 0.05 ohms different from each other.
@kamuts76 жыл бұрын
John Ward thanks John 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼 I subbed twice because you deserve it 😂😁
@harveysmith1008 жыл бұрын
Nice video, very clear for the none sparkies
@PlanetCypher_4 жыл бұрын
Thanks john, Chris sent me here👍
@dg29088 жыл бұрын
Why not reference R1+RN = (r1+rn)/4 at 12m43s ? Ah... it comes later on, nice one
@dg29088 жыл бұрын
Should have said; I appreciate this vid, always good to jog my memory on this sort of stuff
@TheChipmunk20088 жыл бұрын
I agree. I trained up on the 15th edition back in 1980mumble... and the changes are... enormous I recently got back into the trade and have yet to get up to date on certs, so I am working for another chap :)
@CarlosArruda778 жыл бұрын
How about another video on insulation test resistance? Very good video. It jogs the memory.
@ExtremeEngineering6 жыл бұрын
thanks john
@warrengray6107 жыл бұрын
it reminds me of the rhombus loop, or a whetstone bridge!
@TheChipmunk20088 жыл бұрын
I hate the R1+R2 and such names... I wish they'd specify what they're actually measuring. John... as someone with more knowledge than many in the trade, do you find people just 'following rules of thumb' and having no idea what they're actually measuring? That worries me, and I wonder if it's why they've tightened up on the testing in the 17th ed.
@TheChipmunk20088 жыл бұрын
(I still call R1+R2 the earth loop impedence... but part of my mind is saying no, I'm wrong, as that would include the system external to the installation, if you see what I mean)
@The1608796 жыл бұрын
John, you mention that once you find a fault you start opening switches and sockets to rectify. Is this part of the remit? Is the procedure at this point not merely Inspection & Testing (with a report) surely any remedial work is out-with the price. Nobody wants to leave a death trap however there are many many time consuming problems once you get the covers off things. It's a fine cut off line between making a living and having a conscience that someone could get hurt. I'm probably more like you where I can't walk away from a bad installation. I always think last man frees all. Your advice would be greatly apprecaited on this matter
@jwflame6 жыл бұрын
Depends on the context. If it's initial verification, which would be for a new installation, then all defects and faults must be located and repaired before the installation is energised. However if it's an inspection of an existing installation, it would normally be just a report on the condition, so any faults would be recorded on the report, and it would be the decision of the owner of the installation as to when those faults were repaired.
@The1608796 жыл бұрын
I watched another video where a company had already completed the installation and had sub contracted the testing & inspection to another contractor. He completed what he could, reported the discrepancies and let the contractor know what needed rectified before he would sign off the paperwork. I'd say this is where it could get interesting getting paid. As until the client has paid then the paperwork should be the property of the testing contractor, but if the testing contractor won't sign off (and quite rightly so) due to multiple faults with the installation standard then the installation contractor could become difficult or even use someone else not so street wise and bump the first contractor. I thought that alarm bells were ringing when he said that he was testing for another electrical firm who installed the job. Surely they would do it themselves? However getting an independent Inspector in can be good as no biased occur (or shouldn't). So many dillutees, 6 week wonder courses, electrical mates, electrical improvers, adult trainees etc these days that an Inspector really needs to be prepared for some right horror stories once they commence. And ruthless electrical contractors and clients just wanting things signed off when half the time it's non time served guys that roughed it in.
@Raj-ul9my2 жыл бұрын
Error, Line and Netural won't be 0.45 and 0.47, they should be the same as they are both live conductors and must be at same value
@shaunbeard5936 жыл бұрын
Hi John another great video. Is this test conducted with ring mcg on also what way are leads connected on multimeter
@Deebz2705 жыл бұрын
Did you listen to Johns' explanation at all? *Before* work is carried out on the testing of a ring circuit, the main circuit breaker is switched off. Thus shutting power off to everything down circuit from the main circuit breaker. Therefore it is irrelevent whether any of the *mcbs* ( *mini circuit breakers* - I don't know what an mcg is...) are on or off. . As the two ends of the ring circuit are *disconnected* from the 32A mcb, it is obviously prudent - if you wish to avoid getting an electric shock or risk electrocution (death) - to remove the power from the circuit under test. . Finally, if you don't *know* how to use a multimeter - then you shouldn't be considering messing around with live mains circuits- or indeed anything electrical. . If you fully understood electronics or electrical theory, you'd know that this was a *resistance* test and thus it makes no difference which way around your test leads are. . The only time test lead polarity is of any importance (on a multimeter) is when testing voltages in DC ( *Direct Current* ) electrical circuits, where current flows in *one* direction only. DC circuits have *positive* [+] and *negative* [--] conductors. (Red & Black) leads of the multimeter set to read V (volts) or mV (millivolts). AC electrical circuits, by nature of being *Alternating Current,* in that current flows in two directions - back and forth (alternating) and having - *line (live/phase)* and *neutral (combined earth)* conductors (In the UK - brown & blue insulation) require any multimeter to be set to read *AC Volts* (or millivolts), the polarity (which way around) of the (Red & Black) test leads is totally irrelevant, as it is with any impedance or resistance or current (ampere) test. . You can test the conductors of domestic electrical circuits with a *good* multimeter. But generally for domestic/commercial wiring tests of this nature - a dedicated, mulit-function test instrument would be used, which have the facilty to test the resistance of insulation as well. . But my advice to you, is to go and get *fully* educated on electrical circuit theory, before going anywhere near an electrical circuit with any kind of meter.
@steogorman6 жыл бұрын
I love this video thank you,
@paul79donegan42556 жыл бұрын
Being a electrician myself, I would never use a ring circuit if I had my way.
@kimobrien.5 жыл бұрын
No way would you get away with doing something like this in the US.
@johnburns40174 жыл бұрын
@@kimobrien. Is it illegal? In the EU ring circuits are not illegal. They are used in the UK because we have done since WW2 and the installation is cheaper. They do have their advantages.
@davidseed29394 жыл бұрын
John Burns rings were were introduced with square pin plugs which didn’t get replaced widely until 1960 ish. i remember a tv advert explaining “ring mains” as they were called then. The idea as presented was that a ring would go all around each room and then a new socket could be introduced wherever you liked in the room very easily. ( at the time sockets were surface mounted at skirting board level). However, building regs did not require the ring mains to be laid out in a ring like that and cable runs were minimised to the sockets actually installed. So the value of the ring was lost. However, shuttered sockets introduced with square pins plugs were a great safety feature. As a baby, crawling about the floor, i put my little finger in an unswitched, unguarded two pin socket. I remember the pain ( and the room) to this day.
@PurityVendetta3 жыл бұрын
@Defectiveresistor 16 amp radials surely... 🤔
@danielteyehuago16333 жыл бұрын
Please any reason
@stephensharma49944 жыл бұрын
this is very informative ... my only issue is sometimes i have problems understanding your words....eg you might say a word but it is as thou you eat part of the word in pronuncing it .... so i cannot make it out clearly ...can you work on that.... thanks !!
@newlinerealboi34343 жыл бұрын
You’re a nob jockey
@electronicsandradio39453 жыл бұрын
How on earth can any bridging connection cause an overload of any other section.if its actually wired correctly.
@andwelovearpsychopat78204 жыл бұрын
why is live called line?
@jwflame4 жыл бұрын
The definitions have changed over the years. kzbin.info/www/bejne/i3bXhqqBmLeMqdU