briand2
Mechanical
- Jan 15, 2002
- 180
I'm currently looking into an apparent electric shock incident. The bloke involved walked across a room and (reportedly) turned off three groups of lights, one at a time, via a three-gang metal faced switch. On operating the third switch, he saw a flash and felt a shock. At the time, he was wearing regular footwear (rubber soles, presumably). As far as I'm aware, no fuses or mcb's operated.
Shortly afterwards, an electrician found "nothing wrong", and that the Earth Loop Impedance was less than 2 ohms (Note: I don't know if the switch faceplate itself was connected to the adaptable box earth terminal). There is some suggestion that the shock was just static, but it seems from the signs / symptoms that a decent belt was received, not the momentary discomfort that static produces at its worst.
I've occasionally seen arcing while turning off light switches (particularly with inductive loads), so depending on switch design the arc between contacts can leave the switch housing. Does anyone have a view on whether such arcing could have momentarily reached the metal switch / front plate enough to produce a shock, but not be sustained for long enough to trip anything.
Alternatively, has anyone ever come across a "self-clearing" fault in this situation; for example, where a single strand of the conductor happens to touch an earthed part but then burns itself out before the fuse / circuit breaker operates?
Or any other ideas as to how a real shock could have occurred and yet the electrical system when inspected / tested later appears healthy!!
Thanks
Brian
Shortly afterwards, an electrician found "nothing wrong", and that the Earth Loop Impedance was less than 2 ohms (Note: I don't know if the switch faceplate itself was connected to the adaptable box earth terminal). There is some suggestion that the shock was just static, but it seems from the signs / symptoms that a decent belt was received, not the momentary discomfort that static produces at its worst.
I've occasionally seen arcing while turning off light switches (particularly with inductive loads), so depending on switch design the arc between contacts can leave the switch housing. Does anyone have a view on whether such arcing could have momentarily reached the metal switch / front plate enough to produce a shock, but not be sustained for long enough to trip anything.
Alternatively, has anyone ever come across a "self-clearing" fault in this situation; for example, where a single strand of the conductor happens to touch an earthed part but then burns itself out before the fuse / circuit breaker operates?
Or any other ideas as to how a real shock could have occurred and yet the electrical system when inspected / tested later appears healthy!!
Thanks
Brian