Watch the video above to learn how to SAFELY sort out a blown fuse or tripped breaker OR how to get a socket working before the Electrician can turn up and fix the remaining ones!
MAKE SURE You also PRINT OUT the label at the bottom of this post. Stick it onto your Fuseboard. That way you can watch it ANY time if your fuseboard trips and the house plunges into darkness!!
[VIDEO TRANSCRIPT] Hi if your fuse has just blown or your breaker has just tripped on your board or distribution board ... I'm going to show you a safe way of either fixing it yourself so that you can get the power back on. Or, if you can't do that, and I'll tell you how to check, then you might be able to use something to get you running again so that when an electrician comes later on or the next day you still have some power to get that freezer and things back on.
What I'm also going to tell you at the end is how you can ensure that you always have this information at hand should you need it. Because you never know when it's going to trip, you never know what's going to cause tripping. An appliance, the weather outside and a socket, anything. So here goes, the first thing you need to do, if you have something trip, it might be one circuit, for example sockets.
Or it could be lights, or it could be multiple circuits where a few things have gone and you've lost, say, the oven, the lights, the sockets, and so on. That is normally when an RCD device trips and multiple circuits are controlled by one device. So anyway, whatever it is that's gone, you need to first go around that.
So for example, if it's sockets, you need to first go around and unplug. Everything from the socket circuit, if it's sockets. If it's lights, that's a bit more difficult because you can't visually see what's on. But hopefully from memory you can remember what was switched on and what was switched off. So even if it's an outside light, remember sometimes these outside lights are left on.
Switch it off so that you can test. We're not doing anything yet. We're still going around to make sure everything is disconnected. So that you can then later try it back on. One of the things that people often forget is a fused spur. So it might be a fuse holder with a switch like this one, and you would switch it off.
Or it might be just a fuse holder where you would just get a screwdriver and take the fuse out. How do you know if the power, what's still got power on and what hasn't? Hopefully you should see, but if you can't, then maybe if you don't have a plugin tester, you can use a table lamp and you can see if sockets are on them.
So anyway, you've gone around and you've disconnected all of the things outta the socket don't work, that don't work, and you've, uh, switched off the lights now and only now should you try that breaker back up or that RCD because if you try and there's still a fault on there. You can risk damaging that breaker, parts on the board, deteriorating the wiring more, and that sort of thing.
So go to it, see if it works. If it does, great. If it doesn't, this is where you should ask an electrician to come and help. And if they can't get there till the next day, you need to then go to this next step. which is to see if you can get some power on in the meantime. So to get some power on in the meantime, let's say the half of your circuits have gone off, another half is still working.
You might have a socket circuit upstairs and one downstairs, and you've lost the downstairs. You might have all of the up and down sockets gone off, but you might still have some in the kitchen. You might have all of those gone off, but you might have one in the basement. Or, you might have a double width cooker switch that has a socket on.
So there may be somewhere, if you're lucky, If it's been separated like that of having a spare socket somewhere. So what you can do just to make your freezer run for example, maybe the Wi Fi, don't go mad, just to get temporary supply on the thing that you want most urgently, you can take an extension from that to it.
I wouldn't do it with things like washing machines, heaters and powerful things like that. Just lower power things until the electrician gets there. Now, more importantly, how do you also ensure that you always have this information to hand when you need it? Because I've told you this now, but you might forget it when the time comes.
So ideally what you want is something on your fuse board that tells you this instruction. So what I've done is I've got a, um, there's both a website, which you'll see the link of somewhere. And a QR code, and you can print out that QR code, place it on your board, and then next time you have a fault, scan the QR code, it will play this video, and you can go through it again, because in the panic sometimes you forget to try certain things, and this video will remind you.[END OF TRANSCRIPT]
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