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Ground Floor Electricity Outage: Intact Fuses, First Floor Power, Fuse Box Alternatives

ssnejkuu 58939 10
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Treść została przetłumaczona polish » english Zobacz oryginalną wersję tematu
  • #1 9800358
    ssnejkuu
    Level 2  
    Hello, I have such a problem, so this morning I found a strange fact, there is no electricity in the house on the ground floor, I have electricity on the first floor, first steps to the fuses, but here a slight surprise, because they were intact, i.e. not "broken", I changed to another, I turned on but no effect. I have one more box but the other one is sealed and I am not sure if those plugs are to blame. Anyone have any idea?
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  • #2 9800385
    elpapiotr
    Electrician specialist
    Hello.
    Quote:
    Anyone have any idea?

    Of course - include "those", having thought about what the cause could be. Most likely a security overload has occurred.
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  • #3 9800533
    ssnejkuu
    Level 2  
    But what kind of overload could have occurred at night, when no device was in use? It amazes me the most during the day when everything works fine, but at night?
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  • #4 9800566
    elpapiotr
    Electrician specialist
    Hello.

    Well, there is no need for an on-site inspection.
    There will also be a check if the voltage "comes" (phew-what a strange word) to the protections that were replaced.

    This is how I read the latest topics, and I come to the conclusion that the young people should collect signatures for a petition to the parliament rp on amendments to the Polish language act.
    the petition should read - "no use of capital letters in Polish spelling". it would be interesting.
  • #5 9804392
    karolq
    Level 22  
    Check on the fuse feet if there is voltage, if not, then the fuse has probably blown under the seal and you will have to invite PE men :) Alternatively, if you have a meter with the "Failure" indicator (this indicator will be on in the case of a phase missing) or electronic (there are phase presence indicators on the display).
  • #6 9804610
    Anonymous
    Anonymous  
  • #7 9804765
    karolq
    Level 22  
    You, my friend Bronek22 :) !! Mod will kill us for off top :)
  • #8 9804799
    elpapiotr
    Electrician specialist
    Hello.

    You are surprised, mate karolq ?
    ele_pp dn. 07 Sie 2011 o 16:40 wrote:
    it will also not do without checking whether the tension "comes" (phew-what a strange word) to those protections that were exchanged.
    karolq dn. 08 Sie 2011 o 19:24 wrote:
    Check on the fuse feet if there is voltage, if not, then the fuse has blown under the seal

    Like a parrot. :D
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  • #9 9804991
    matekogon
    Level 22  
    To the founder of the topic whether you have any equipment to make measurements, or to state clearly whether the voltage is there or not
  • #10 9818749
    ssnejkuu
    Level 2  
    Hello, the electrician said that the electricity is coming to the meter, but it does not go any further, diagnosis - burned out cable and I will have to replace the riser
  • #11 9819370
    zbich70
    Level 43  
    ssnejkuu wrote:
    Hello, the electrician said that the electricity is coming to the meter, but it does not go any further, diagnosis - burned out cable and I will have to replace the riser

    Auxiliary question: did the electrician report to the supplier his intention to unseal the meter and looked under the cover of the terminal strip at all? Or maybe ad hoc ruled that the so-called "riser" can be replaced without bothering to check the connections on the meter strip?
    I divide a bit but I also warn you because a common practice is to trick laymen into "big work" for a lot of money (not counting the demolition), while the fault is ridiculously funny.

Topic summary

The discussion revolves around a ground floor electricity outage while the first floor remains powered. The user initially checks the fuses, finding them intact, and attempts to replace them without success. Responses suggest that a possible security overload may have occurred, although the user questions how this could happen overnight with no devices in use. Suggestions include checking for voltage at the fuse feet and using a meter to identify phase issues. Ultimately, the user reports that an electrician diagnosed a burned-out cable requiring riser replacement, raising concerns about whether proper checks were conducted on the meter connections before concluding the issue.
Summary generated by the language model.
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