logo elektroda
logo elektroda
X
logo elektroda

Connecting Two Phases to Restore Current in My Room: Is It Safe?

tekondo 7050 7
ADVERTISEMENT
Treść została przetłumaczona polish » english Zobacz oryginalną wersję tematu
  • #1 16584759
    tekondo
    Level 7  
    Yesterday they cut my current out on one phase. It was unfortunate that this phase goes to my room. And so I started to figure out if something will happen when I go to the power socket (of course, with the cables turned off), I will put a wire in one phase on which there is electricity and in the second phase on which there is no power on and I will get electricity in both phases? I think right? I was looking for something similar on the internet but I did not find an answer to my question; p.
  • ADVERTISEMENT
  • #2 16584762
    PeCeZu
    Level 16  
    Forget this idea! This practice is dangerous for you and the installation. The question is why did they only turn off one phase? Tariff change?
  • ADVERTISEMENT
  • #3 16584776
    Łukasz.K
    Level 28  
    But then you would have to turn off the fuse leading to your room to the sockets where there is no electricity now, because if they give electricity, it will short circuit. In addition, you will have force protection on the sockets for some time, so if you accidentally short-circuit your socket, it can burn the wiring in the room and cause a fire.
  • #4 16584778
    tekondo
    Level 7  
    It was only temporary, but it made me think why it was dangerous, I ignore that someone could only touch this connection by force.

    Łukasz.K wrote:
    But then you would have to turn off the fuse leading to your room to the sockets where there is no electricity now, because if they give electricity, it will short circuit. In addition, you will have force protection on the sockets for some time, so if you accidentally short-circuit your socket, it can burn the installation in the room.


    I don't understand why turn off the fuse. My point is that this phase, which I do not have now, I turn off the switchboard and connect the phase that is with the phase that is lacking in strength, and thus the phase also goes where it is temporarily missing and it goes through the fuse box to the room (of course, this phase now there is no switch off in the distribution, which will not short circuit when this phase appears).
  • #5 16584794
    Łukasz.K
    Level 28  
    Because you wrote the sockets, not on the switchboard.
  • ADVERTISEMENT
  • #6 16584795
    Anonymous
    Anonymous  
  • ADVERTISEMENT
  • #7 16584799
    tekondo
    Level 7  
    Nobody turned off it was just a fade, for example by works by power plants. I meant a power socket that in this socket will connect 2 phases and on the switching station I will turn off the current on 1 phase ;)
  • #8 16584848
    PeCeZu
    Level 16  
    Since there was a loss and after the power returns, one phase is missing from you, it should be reported to the power company. Come to fix the fault and it will be finito. There is no need to combine this

Topic summary

The discussion revolves around the safety and feasibility of connecting two electrical phases to restore power in a room after one phase was temporarily cut off. Participants strongly advise against this practice, citing significant risks such as potential short circuits, fire hazards, and damage to electrical installations. They emphasize the importance of reporting the outage to the power company for proper resolution rather than attempting to create a makeshift connection. Concerns about the user's electrical knowledge and skills are also raised, highlighting the dangers of improper handling of electrical systems.
Summary generated by the language model.
ADVERTISEMENT