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Thread: Neutrel switching
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18-06-2006, 04:15 PM #1
Neutrel switching
Thanks for your thoughts the last time i visited the forum,ive decided the engineers route, problem is ive hit my first brickwall?
I,m fine with live switching and fault finding but how do you test a circuit that controls by switching NEUTRALS with my multi meter.
any help much apprciated.
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18-06-2006, 06:33 PM #2
Re: Neutrel switching
Can you give us an example of a circuit that uses neutral switching in the UK?
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18-06-2006, 07:12 PM #3
Re: Neutral switching
Originally Posted by frank
For testing a t.stat for example. the 'dead' leg will -supposedly-be incoming, the way is to put the tester either side of the switch and check for voltage across as you would normally.
It can be best to work from the live side and see where it goes dead you just have to be a bit more careful.
For practise if you have a working cabinet accessible to play with, just swap the live for the neutral in the plug and see what happens
cheers
richard
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18-06-2006, 07:53 PM #4
Re: Neutrel switching
I've only come across a neutral switch once. It was on an old American time clock. Strange way of doing it, and as you say, it could be dangerous. Goes against all your instincts when trouble shooting.
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18-06-2006, 09:50 PM #5
Re: Neutral switching
I;ve come across this problem on 2 new zanussi cabinets this week alone and they were commercial cabinets,also on a Zanotti coldroom.I will try your idea Richard of swapping the plug wires if it goes bang ne sweat.
cheers
Wizzer
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21-06-2006, 06:08 PM #6
Re: Neutrel switching
Is switching the neutral, not against IEE regs
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21-06-2006, 09:44 PM #7
Re: Neutrel switching
Hi Guys
Reeferjon and MRW will know more about this than i do but i am sure some TK SR units use neutral switching on the control circuits
Regards
Fatboy
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22-06-2006, 10:37 AM #8
Re: Neutrel switching
PE switching is against the regulation, not neutral switching.
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22-06-2006, 10:53 PM #9
Re: Neutrel switching
if you follow the control circuit from the end backwards wouldn't the break be showm by a backfeed of 240v or whatever the control voltage is.
i do agree that live switching is easier to follow but a lot of continental cabinets used to be neutral switched and as long as there were no electronic controls we just used to reverse the cables at the cabinet, not in the plug and we always marked the system for the next engineer
happy to help
bill
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23-06-2006, 03:27 AM #10
Re: Neutrel switching
99% of the mechanical timeclocks used for defrost termination switch on the neutral side, it is one of the rare occasions where it is allowed in Canada.
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15-02-2009, 03:41 PM #11
Re: Neutrel switching
I see neutral switching sometimes on icemachines, scotsman mainly it definately makes fault finding awkward..don't really see why they do that -maybe to reduce arcing at the switch was my only thought or maybe just certain manufacturers convention
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15-02-2009, 04:03 PM #12
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15-02-2009, 09:12 PM #13
Re: Neutrel switching
Ha! spot the rookie poster!
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18-04-2009, 12:18 AM #14
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