porker
Established Member
OK, I guess you know this - running without an earth is dangerous practice as the metal parts could be live and you've just removed the protection. When you say you have tripped everything is this the earth leakage breaker taking out all the other circuits? If you are not sure put up a picture of your consumer unit.
Because both your lathes are taking out the circuit I think they are both giving just enough to just take the leakage over the edge as stated earlier.
I'm afraid I don't 100% agree with tdsoldgit that the lathe is definately faulty (although it might be). I would expect your lathe to leak a very small amount as these have the filters as he explained and they tend to leak to a lesser extent. Everything else I agree with. The fact that either lathe does this means it is unlikley they both have a similar fault (not impossible but unlikley).
There are various things you could try but getting an electrician is your best bet. It's too easy to make a mistake. I would put that earth back on if I were you. BTW if you are switching other circuits off to see where the cause might be, be aware that turning off a circuit at the MCB does not usually disconnect the neutral so if you have a neutral-earth fault, switching off the circuit won't stop the tripping.
Because both your lathes are taking out the circuit I think they are both giving just enough to just take the leakage over the edge as stated earlier.
I'm afraid I don't 100% agree with tdsoldgit that the lathe is definately faulty (although it might be). I would expect your lathe to leak a very small amount as these have the filters as he explained and they tend to leak to a lesser extent. Everything else I agree with. The fact that either lathe does this means it is unlikley they both have a similar fault (not impossible but unlikley).
There are various things you could try but getting an electrician is your best bet. It's too easy to make a mistake. I would put that earth back on if I were you. BTW if you are switching other circuits off to see where the cause might be, be aware that turning off a circuit at the MCB does not usually disconnect the neutral so if you have a neutral-earth fault, switching off the circuit won't stop the tripping.