Home appliances have become much more sophisticated. Get to know your system so that you can spot emerging problems so that you know what to do in case of an interrupted power supply.
June 30, 2015
Home appliances have become much more sophisticated. Get to know your system so that you can spot emerging problems so that you know what to do in case of an interrupted power supply.
Check your breaker panel or fuse box
Keep a small flashlight next to your breaker panel for use in emergencies — it'll save you from hunting for a light in the darkness.
Call an electrician if the problem isn't resolved — your wiring could be in a dangerous state.
Distribution board
The consumer unit (or breaker box or fuse box) is a box wired between your electricity meter and the electrical outlets in your home. Its job is to distribute power to subsidiary circuits, and protect these circuits from dangerous overloads.
Older units contain wire fuses for this purpose, while modern ones have miniature circuit breakers (MCBs) that switch off the power if it exceeds a set value. The distribution board may also contain a residual current device (RCD). This detects the leakage of electrical current that may occur if your wiring is faulty or if someone receives an electric shock, and cuts the power immediately. A main on/off switch in the unit cuts power to all circuits in the home.
*Not only is it dangerous, it may even be illegal in some provinces, such as Québec, to do your own electrical wiring. The solution: consider hiring a master electrician.
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