Electrical faults in the home and what to do about them
Imagine this: you’re having a busy day doing the washing and ironing, making meals for the week ahead, and getting your housework done.Suddenly, in the middle of it all, the power goes off. Sometimes to your whole house, but more commonly to just one group of power sockets or lights.
What do you do and how do you fix it?
Before calling an electrician, try solving the problem yourself. It’s easy to work out which of the two most common household electrical faults is the culprit – an overload or a wiring fault.
Lights can blow the fuse if a light bulb blows or a fault occurs on the circuit. To identify the problem:
- Turn off all the lights and reset the tripped fuse.
- Turn on the lights one at a time.
- If there is a faulty light, it will trip the fuse.
- Turn it off, reset the fuse, and turn on other lights again – ensuring the faulty one is left switched off.
- Turn off all your appliances.
- Turn them on one at a time.
- If one trips the fuse straight away, you know the appliance is faulty.
- If the fuse blows after a little while, the problem is an overload.

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