wrightclan
Established Member
I have a couple of electrical questions with regard to my planer. I have a multico planer with a 2hp Clarke motor and a 10-16 amp starter switch (set to 10 amp.) It has been periodically blowing 13 amp plug fuses on startup (only ever on startup i.e. never due to taking too heavy a cut.) It seems to happen more frequently in cold weather.
My first question. Shouldn't the starter switch (as I understand it basically a 10-16amp MCB--set at 10 amp) trip before blowing the plug fuse?
I've been planning for some time to hardwire it to a 16amp MCB in my consumer unit. Finally yesterday, after blowing several fuses in a week, I bit the bullet and did exactly that. It's up and running fine, but in the process, I came across something else I don't understand.
The consumer unit is a split load, with three outdoor circuits protected by an RCD. I initially wired my 16 amp circuit into the non-protected side. But as soon as I switched on the planer, it tripped the RCD? I checked all my wiring both visually and with a continuity tester. Everything seemed fine, but it kept tripping the RCD (again I was reasonably sure that MCB was unprotected by the RCD.) Finally, I moved it over to the protected side, with the outdoor circuits, and everything is working fine. What's going on? Your advice would be appreciated.
Brad
My first question. Shouldn't the starter switch (as I understand it basically a 10-16amp MCB--set at 10 amp) trip before blowing the plug fuse?
I've been planning for some time to hardwire it to a 16amp MCB in my consumer unit. Finally yesterday, after blowing several fuses in a week, I bit the bullet and did exactly that. It's up and running fine, but in the process, I came across something else I don't understand.
The consumer unit is a split load, with three outdoor circuits protected by an RCD. I initially wired my 16 amp circuit into the non-protected side. But as soon as I switched on the planer, it tripped the RCD? I checked all my wiring both visually and with a continuity tester. Everything seemed fine, but it kept tripping the RCD (again I was reasonably sure that MCB was unprotected by the RCD.) Finally, I moved it over to the protected side, with the outdoor circuits, and everything is working fine. What's going on? Your advice would be appreciated.
Brad